![]() ![]() ![]() Select Always Move to Other if you want all future messages from the sender to be delivered to the. If you're moving from Focused to Other, select Move to Other if you want only the selected message moved. Maybe I’ve been out of the loop given the current state of the world, but this came as a bit of a surprise to me. From your inbox, select the Focused or Other tab, and then right-click the message you want to move. When this happens, miscategorized messages can be dragged to the correct tab and dropped there - although it’s not clear how much impact that will have on future mailings. In my own inbox, different promotional mailings from the same sender (same domain, IP infrastructure, and authentication) were split between the Promotions and Other tabs. Looking through the tabs, the categorizations seem fairly accurate but not perfect. When you choose your tabs and click Save, you’re presented with your new inbox with the allocated tabs plus the category “Other” for anything that doesn’t fall under the chosen groupings. Included in the available tabs are Focused Inbox, Microsoft’s “Priority Inbox” clone, along with Promotions, Social, and Newsletters. All other emails are still there in the regular Inbox. Upon clicking the button to “Try them,” I saw the same dialog box shared by the Mystery Tweeter: This new feature gives Outlook email users some flexibility on how mail comes into their inboxes. That is, until I logged into my account today and was greeted with an option to enable inbox tabs in my account. You can learn more about the feature through the link below. Outlook on the web will disable the 'Always move to Other' and show a tooltip. The screenshots are the only thing ever posted by the Twitter account and this was the first I had heard of Microsoft adding tabbed sections to their inbox view, so I took it all with a grain of salt. if you're in ( simply right click on the email and choose Move to Focused Inbox or Move to Other Inbox. Twitter user bdsams (Opens in a new tab) posted what appeared to be his inbox, for instance, and it was chock full of patently obvious junk. Last week, a mysterious, newly-created Twitter account shared these screenshots of Microsoft’s Outlook web interface with tabs similar to those found in Gmail: ![]()
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