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Microsoft Schedule+

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Microsoft Schedule+
Developer(s)Microsoft
Initial release1992; 32 years ago (1992)
Final release
Operating systemWindows 3.0 and later
PlatformIA-32
SuccessorMicrosoft Outlook
Standard(s)OLE 2.0
TypeTime management
LicenseProprietary commercial software

Microsoft Schedule+ is a discontinued time management app developed by Microsoft. It was included by Microsoft in the Microsoft Office productivity suite since the Office 95 version.[1] Since the Office 97 version, most of its functionality was incorporated into the Outlook 97 program.[1][2]

History

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Schedule+ was originally developed by Microsoft as a companion to the Microsoft Mail email client starting with version 3.0 in 1992, but was later shipped with Exchange Server 5.0, Microsoft Office 95, Exchange Client and Windows Messaging. The "Outlook Calendar" feature that was part of Outlook for Windows 3.1 and Macintosh versions before 9.0 was actually a new version of Schedule+. Since the loss of many features in Office 97, it was included on Office up to Microsoft Office 2003, although it was just to support conversion from Schedule+ 1.x.

The first version of Schedule+ was released in 1992 for Windows 3.0 and classic Mac OS. Versions 2 through 6 were skipped, and the next version became version 7, released in 1995 for Windows 95 and classic Mac OS. Version 7.5 was included with Office 97 up to Office 2003.

Bugs

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Year 2020+ Problem

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The first version of Schedule+ as bundled with version 3.0 of the Microsoft Mail email client had a showstopper bug in that by setting the system clock to a year greater than 2019 (or by having the system date roll over to January 1, 2020), an error message will occur due to the software being designed to operate within a 100-year time window ranging from 1920 to 2019.[3] This is sometimes referred to as the Year 2020+ problem, or Y2K20+, as the bug caused the software to not accept the years 2020 and beyond.

This bug was fixed with the version of Schedule+ included with Office 95 onwards (version 7 in fact), which allowed the software to continue to work with years greater than 2019.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "ARCHIVED: What is Microsoft Schedule+?". kb.iu.edu. Indiana University. 27 August 2012.
  2. ^ "Microsoft Schedule+". GUI Info. Archived from the original on 16 November 2011.
  3. ^ "Q192201: XCLN: Schedule + 1.0 Will Not Run After 12/31/2019". KnowledgeBase Archive. Retrieved 2022-07-06.