![]() Most significant of all, though, is the Calendar application, entirely new to Windows Vista. You can also import and export contacts using vCards or Comma Separated Value (CSV) files. ![]() It’s a big step forward from the previous Windows Address Book, though more accessible and supporting more fields. Windows Contacts, rather than being a standard application, curiously presents each contact as a file in a Contacts folder sat in a user’s home directory. Support for internet newsgroups remains, with the addition of “community ratings”, allowing users to vote on the usefulness of posts. Most significantly, there’s now a configurable junk mail folder, which also provides a degree of phishing protection, and Vista’s instant search engine to make finding previous correspondence substantially faster. ![]() It’s an almost identical program, with a few extras to bring it up to date. ![]() We’ve had Outlook Express since Windows 95, but Vista’s built-in email client comes with a brand new name – Windows Mail. ![]()
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