The Home tab of the Ribbon in Outlook 2011 for Mac is where you spend most of your time when working with e-mail. It has most of the commands you need. The buttons on the Ribbon’s Home tab, in Office 2011 for Mac, do the following:
E-Mail: Opens a new mail message dialog.
New: Displays a pop-up menu from which you can choose to make a new e-mail message, meeting, appointment, contact, contact group, task, or note.
Delete: Deletes the select message.
Reply: When a message is selected, displays a mail message pre-addressed to the sender of the selected message, with the body of the original message included and indented.
Reply All: Same as Reply, but all recipients in the To and CC fields in the original message are replied to.
Forward: Opens a mail message with the contents of the selected message.
Meeting: Opens a dialog that lets you schedule a meeting, complete with the ability to add a customized meeting invitation to send to invitees, and the ability to use the Scheduling Assistant to help you check for available times in your calendar.
Attachment: Opens a new mail message with the contents of the selected message attached so that you can send it as-is to recipients you specify.
Move: Select one or more messages in the list and then click this button to display a browser that lets you choose a folder in your folder list.
Rules: Displays a pop-up menu that lets you apply existing rules or display the Rules dialog discussed later in this chapter.
Junk: Select one or more messages in the message list and then click this to display a menu with the following options:
Mark as Junk:Changes the category of selected messages to Junk.
Block Sender: Adds the sender’s e-mail address to the list of blocked senders in Tools→Junk E-Mail Protection→Blocked Senders.
Mark as Not Junk:Only displays if three or more messages are selected, or if you change the state of a selected message previously classified as junk to not junk.
Unread: Changes the state of a read message to unread. The button may change to Read so you can change the state of a message from unread to read.
Categorize: Using the pop-up menu, you can apply a category to selected messages, display a dialog to add or edit categories, and clear categories from selected messages.
Follow-Up: Click the triangle next to the flag to display a pop-up menu that lets you set a reminder for the selected item.
Filters: Click the triangle on the right of this button to display a pop-up menu from which you can choose a variety of filters or clear all filters.
Find a Contact: Type a contact’s name and then press Return or Enter to display the results of your contact search in the Contacts Search.
Contacts Search: Displays the Contacts Search dialog.
Send/Receive: Click this button to tell Outlook to check with the mail server and update the message list and send messages that are queued in the Outbox.
When the thought pops into your head, “I should make a note of that,” click the Notes button in the lower-left corner of the Outlook 2011 for Mac window, press Command-5, or choose View→Go To→Notes from the menu bar to display the Notes list. The Notes feature fills the need to make a quick note that gets added to your list of notes. Think of notes as a “stick-on notes” equivalent within Outlook.
The Home tab of the Ribbon in Outlook 2011 for Mac is where you spend most of your time when working with e-mail. It has most of the commands you need. The buttons on the Ribbon’s Home tab, in Office 2011 for Mac, do the following: E-Mail: Opens a new mail message dialog. New: Displays. Office 2011 for Mac computers is set to launch by the end of the year, just in time for the Christmas 2010 holiday season. Office 2011 for Mac will bring ribbon support for applications.
Q2: Could be, since I bought a license for Office 2011 for MAC there were no software problems with Outlook 2011. I cannot tell you if the latest update has any influence on Outlook 2011. The other programs are working well like Word, Excel, PP etc. Making Notes within Outlook in Office 2011 for Mac By Geetesh Bajaj, James Gordon When the thought pops into your head, “I should make a note of that,” click the Notes button in the lower-left corner of the Outlook 2011 for Mac window, press Command-5, or choose View→Go To→Notes from the menu bar to display the Notes list. Microsoft’s latest Office 2011 for Mac productivity suite, which goes on sale tomorrow, promises to deliver better compatibility with the company’s Windows version of Office and corporate.
Making a note on the spot in Outlook 2011 for Mac
When you click the Note button on the Home tab of the Ribbon in Notes view, or if you choose File→New→Note from the menu bar, a New Note window appears. The New Note window is pretty bare — it’s meant to just hold a few lines of text. Start typing your note.
Outlook 2011 For Mac Support
You can also add nontext content to your note by right-clicking the note and choosing Import Image to open a file-browsing dialog.

Outlook For Mac 2011 Office 365
If you want to include a screen shot in your note, before you type anything in the note, right-click and choose Capture Selection from Screen. Drag diagonally over the screen to pop a screen capture directly into your note.
To save a note, click the X at the upper-left corner of the note and then click the Save button.


Printing notes in Outlook 2011 for Mac
You might want to print a note or all of your notes. To print out a note or all your notes, while viewing Notes choose File→Print, click the Print button on the Standard toolbar, or press Command-P to display the Print dialog. Choose whether to print the selected note or all notes from the Print pop-up menu and then select or deselect Note options and Page options as desired.