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The beta version, sent out to testers this week, goes out under the banner of "Windows Live," launched earlier month. However, it is actually part of a longtime effort to revamp Hotmail, Microsoft's current free, Web-based e-mail service.
Microsoft is building Windows Live Mail from scratch, keeping Hotmail and its 215 million active users on a separate system, Brooke Richardson, a lead product manager in Microsoft's MSN division, said. The goal in rebuilding the service from the ground up is to improve performance and enable desktop-like e-mail features found in its Outlook program. An emerging programming technology known as AJAX is central to the effort, she said.
Bill Gates, Chairman, Microsoft |
The Windows Live package aims to provide Internet-based personal tools such blogging and instant messaging software, as well as the e-mail service. Microsoft expects the products to be supported by advertising, as it girds to take on Web giants such as Google and Yahoo.
Most people will have to wait until next year for the new service while Microsoft fine-tunes it. The software maker has invited thousands of people test the beta version since July and plans to open up testing to millions of people over the next few months, Richardson said.
The new e-mail test version includes nearly a dozen new features. Among them is a spell-check tool that underlines errors as people compose messages and suggests alternate spellings when they right-click on the word.
The company has also modified security features to call more attention to e-mails that may be related to a "phishing" identity theft scam. The program rates all incoming messages using three safety levels: "known sender," "unknown sender" or "unsafe." It calls special attention to "unsafe" e-mails.
The new release also includes a faster e-mail search engine that looks through the body of each message and checks the subject and address lines. In addition, the in-box and contact list includes a scroll feature, allowing people to view more messages and entries in a single page view.
Windows Live Mail also offers users 2 gigabytes of free storage compared with the 250 megabytes that's available for free with Hotmail, Richardson said. And Windows Live Mail users can keep their Hotmail.com e-mail addresses. To request access to the test version of the new service, visit Ideas.live.com.
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MSN Hotmail,
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Microsoft Corp.





If you've used Outlook Web Access before, this is just a cleaned up version of that applied to Hotmail. MS has been using AJAX in OWA before Google was even a thought...although it's nice to see MS taking it public.
I'm still waiting to go from 2MB to 250MB.
what ads to send me. Now, they really wouldn't do that, would
they????
Maybe they would.....
....... So I don't think that I'll tempt them with my email.
He never receive the good comments from his "low level" employees.
His email account own by the stupid screener, he only receive mails says "you are greatest man in the world"
"what a great idea"
Share price drop will keep continue...
do what they are 'told'. Most didn't have a choice, and don't want
one. Choices just confuse them.
While we do vote with our wallets in support of big business, we still appreciate the fallback provision of a smaller competitor who usually picks up the pieces when the big dogs loose touch with the customer. It happens more than you realize. How do you think today's monsters got to be so big?
I also have found no way back to the old trusted and, working well, version of Hotmail. As far as I'm concerned it's a dead horse.
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by whozzit
July 7, 2009 8:29 PM PDT
- You guys are going to have to get a little more educated on security and web based anything. One of your ports (into your computer) is already owned by your ISP, password protected from the outside by your ISP and there is no way that you can close that port. That port is required by federal law for use at such times as the data on your computer may be "required" to be inspected. It's there, I know it, I tried to close it and wasn't able to, and I called my ISP about it. They explained to me the federal law that requires that port to be there. They explained to me that I shouldn't worry about it; that it's protected with a 40 digit password that they change on a regular basis.
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