I don’t recall clicking on any of those things in the last decade. In the above screenshot, my Suggested Actions are Search Tools, Address Book, and Filter Email. Several things come to mind about that box, that very large box.īut let’s start with the Suggested Actions. Apparently, they’re only listed to inspire nostalgic memories. There is also a section of “Recent Searches,” which amuses me tonight because I can’t actually click on anything listed there. When you click on it, a box drops down with a selection of options – “suggested searches,” searches for a few people that you’ve dreamed about recently, and “Suggested Actions” in Outlook. See it up at the top? Above the ribbon, on the title bar. Don’t think about it, just use muscle memory, you’ve done it a million times.
If you’re a long-time Outlook user, then click in the screenshot above to search for a message in my mailbox. What is changing about the Outlook search bar? Microsoft is changing the position of the search bar as part of a grand vision that expands Microsoft Search into a universal tool that encompasses web and enterprise data in addition to our own stuff, and uses AI to make our searches so smart that we get over our initial feelings of annoyance. And just like the monster, you can’t stop it. If you use the Outlook desktop program for Windows, the search bar is going to change and move around and grow and grow and grow like a mutant chicken heart from an old horror movie.