Category | Price | Seller | Device |
---|---|---|---|
Business | Free | Microsoft Corporation | iPhone, iPad, iPod |
Just sign in with the work or school account you already use to access Office 365, and you’re ready, set, go. No subject lines, salutations, or signatures. Just quick, natural conversations.
Oh, happiness.
You see only the messages started in Send—not your entire email inbox. But since Send is based on email, you can message anyone with an email address. No additional sign up steps and the people you message can respond from anywhere, even if they don’t have the app.
Delirious, yet?
This also means the conversation doesn’t have to stop when you put down your phone. Send messages are delivered to your email inbox, too. Letting you respond from your computer, when it tickles your fancy.
Send often. Send freely. Send happy.
Microsoft Garage turns fresh ideas into real projects. Learn more at http://Microsoft.com/garage.
Great concept, but doesn't work with any of my 6 email accounts. Should've waited until developed further.
This app works wonderfully. Clean and performs well. This idea of using email as a IM protocol needs expanded to all!
Tried my 365 login... Gmail not supported. Tried my exchange work address... It's not supported. So what we have here is a messaging app that works with nothing.
It is easy to use, almost no training. Love the fact Send is tied into the greater MS platform. A few gaps still exist. First, there is no way to label teams or groups. If you had 10 or so various groups, it would be difficult to sort through them. Second, is to have the ability to change the group name assuming that gets put in place in the future. Third ask, is to allow groups to be sent to various members. This will allow team introduction with little effort. Nice app!
App fails to authenticate with O365. It finds my email address, redirects me to my company's ADFS sign-in, spins for awhile, then says ""We've got the wrong email address. Please update it, then sign in again." No issues with other Microsoft apps authenticating with O365.
It's a neat concept - but if I want to email someone, my Outlook app is literally one app to the left. Why choose this when I can choose Outlook??