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Plugin · Microsoft 365

Microsoft 365 — Outlook mail + calendar

Sign in to your Microsoft account once, and your mail and calendar come into LVIS. Natural-language requests like 'sort out the meeting requests' or 'show me today's schedule' are handled right in chat.

Outlook mail
Outlook calendar
sign in once

Login flow

OAuth login trigger
Microsoft OAuth login window
Login succeeded — summary of mail/calendar permissions
Logout / token revocation screen
  • Click the "Sign in to Microsoft 365" card → the standard Microsoft login window opens to collect consent securely.
  • Once you sign in, the token is stored encrypted in LVIS's secure storage.
  • Signing out deletes the token immediately, and you'll sign in again the next time you use it.

Feature summary

  • Mail — browse inbox, search, generate reply drafts, send (after user confirmation), watch for new mail.
  • Calendar — view today's schedule, find free time, create/update/delete events, detect recurrence patterns, detect conflicts.

Real-world scenario — one meeting-request email becomes a scheduled event plus a reply

  1. 01

    A meeting request email arrives

    mail

    When a new email contains a keyword like "meeting", the host detects the incoming mail.

  2. 02

    Body analysis → candidate times extracted

    analysis

    Automatically pulls out the proposed dates, times, and attendees from the body.

  3. 03

    Free-time search

    calendar

    Checks the calendar for the proposed time slots — moves on if free, or shows a confirmation card if there's a conflict.

  4. 04

    Reply draft generated automatically

    confirm before send

    A reply draft appears as a card in chat. It's only actually sent the moment the user clicks "Send".

Risky actions like sending always require confirmation
"Write" actions such as sending mail or creating events go through a confirmation card or dialog, and stop immediately with no fallback if the permission has been revoked.
Consolidation of two former plugins
Mail and calendar used to be separate plugins. Now they're merged into one, so a single sign-in covers both.