
Even though I know all the common shortcuts and have my hand on or near the keyboard, I often grab for the mouse to click buttons. Yes, I know, breaking the mouse habit is hard. Instead of using a mouse to use a quick action, use the keyboard, it’s often faster than using a mouse. Note that not all the options available for Quick Actions are on the right-click menu. Until Microsoft fixes this, assuming they move it back to the left side, you can use keyboard shortcuts or the right-click context menu. I highly recommend leaving feedback by voting and commenting on this suggestion: QUICK ACTIONS Workarounds


Users cannot change this back, only Microsoft can move it. Quick Actions on the right, in the Received date field: Quick Actions on the left, between the sender name and subject field: Otherwise, you can visit the Office hub here to get started.Users began complaining last week that the quick actions in Outlook on the web (when the reading pane is off or on the bottom) moved from the From field on the left side of the message list to the far right, in the Received column, which for many users, is a long mouse movement to use the quick actions. This app gives you links to the web versions of all these apps, and it even lets you quickly access your previously edited files stored on OneDrive. The web versions even allow for real-time co-authoring, so you and a coworker or classmate can work on the same documents at once.Ī quick and easy way to access all these apps on Windows 11 is to use the Microsoft 365 app (previously called Office) that's built right into the OS. You can, of course, write your documents, format text, insert images or tables, and even use the review features to track changes. These web versions are fairly feature-complete, even if they don't have every single feature you might see on the desktop apps.


There's also a version of OneNote, but because it's free you may as well download the proper desktop app. Microsoft offers versions of Word, PowerPoint, and Excel that you can access from your web browser, and you can do most of the work you'd usually need to do just fine this way. If you're on a computer, the easiest way to use Microsoft Office apps is to use their web versions.
