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  2. Microsoft Office 2003 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_2003

    Microsoft Office 2003 (codenamed Office 11 [9]) is an office suite developed and distributed by Microsoft for its Windows operating system. Office 2003 was released to manufacturing on August 19, 2003, [1] and was later released to retail on October 21, 2003. [10] The Mac OS X equivalent, Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac was released on May 11, 2004.

  3. Microsoft Mail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Mail

    The second Microsoft Mail product, Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 2.1, [3] was introduced in 1991. It was based on Network Courier, a LAN email system produced by Consumers Software of Vancouver, B.C., which Microsoft had bought. Following the initial 1991 rebranding release, Microsoft issued its first major update as Version 3.0 in 1992.

  4. Microsoft Outlook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Outlook

    Microsoft Outlook is a personal information manager software system from Microsoft, available as a part of the Microsoft 365 software suites. Primarily popular as an email client for businesses, Outlook also includes functions such as calendaring, task managing, contact managing, note-taking, journal logging, web browsing, and RSS news aggregation.

  5. Microsoft Office shared tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_shared_tools

    A Microsoft Office Binder Wizard used the extension .OBZ. Binder was no longer shipped with Office versions starting from XP. [6] Office XP and Office 2003 comes with an optional Unbind utility that, upon execution, extracts the contents of the Binder document to a directory of the user’s choosing. [7]

  6. Visual Studio Tools for Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Studio_Tools_for_Office

    Visual Studio Tools for Office (VSTO) is a set of development tools available in the form of a Visual Studio add-in (project templates) and a runtime that allows Microsoft Office 2003 and later versions of Office applications to host the .NET Framework Common Language Runtime (CLR) to expose their functionality via .NET.

  7. Personal Storage Table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_Storage_Table

    In Microsoft Exchange Server, the messages, the calendar, and other data items are delivered to and stored on the server. Microsoft Outlook stores these items in a personal-storage-table (.pst) or off-line-storage-table (.ost) files that are located on the local computer.

  8. Microsoft Office XP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_XP

    Microsoft ultimately decided on "Office XP" as the final name of the product. [25] In spite of this, individual Office XP products such as Excel, PowerPoint, and Word would continue to use Microsoft's year-based naming conventions and were named after the year 2002. [23] Office XP Beta 2 was released to 10,000 technical testers in late 2000. [26]

  9. History of Microsoft Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Microsoft_Office

    Also known as Office 2002. [5] August 19, 2003 Office 2003 (11.0) Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher, OneNote, InfoPath Third version to receive 5 years of extended support. Fourth version to receive extended support. First version to only support NT-based operating systems. Final version to use the legacy interface.