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May 30, 2008 12:56 PM PDT

Yahoo gets more social with new Messenger 9 beta

by Stephen Shankland

Yahoo Messenger 9 offers a more elaborate friend list and can display videos and photos in the chat window.

Yahoo Messenger 9 offers a more elaborate friend list and can display videos and photos in the chat window.

(Credit: Yahoo)

You can't take it with you, at least when it comes to your social graph.

But with a new beta version of Yahoo Messenger 9 software (download it for Windows) released Thursday, users have new options for reconstructing networks of friends and contacts they've built elsewhere.

The new beta of Yahoo Messenger 9 can help user invite contacts on AOL, Google's Gmail and Orkut, Microsoft's Hotmail, MySpace, and other online services to connect through the Yahoo service. Version 9 also includes a special group of all people in your Yahoo address book, helping to connect with contacts users may have stored elsewhere within Yahoo itself.

Also tying more deeply into the rest of Yahoo, the new beta can be used to reflect some other activities within the network--for example, when somebody spotlights a Web site of interest using Yahoo Buzz.

"We'll add more types of updates in the future," said product manager Sarah Bacon in a blog posting about the new beta.

Yahoo Messenger 9 is intended for use on Windows XP, in contrast to the more obviously named Yahoo Messenger for Vista (download it for Windows Vista). The final version of the Yahoo Messenger 9 is due in the third quarter, Yahoo said. The Mac equivalent is scheduled to be released by the end of the year.

Also new in the beta is a better interface for setting status messages--even if you're away from your IM software, Yahoo said. And links to games present in Yahoo Messenger 8 has made its way to version 9, so users can play pool, checkers, and others. However, only those with version 8.1 or later can play games with those using the version 9 beta, Yahoo said.

Yahoo Messenger's icon, a frighteningly happy face, reflects the fact that people have a whole section of their brains just for processing facial information. Yahoo is tapping into that visual cortex a little more directly with the new beta, which uses larger emoticons.

For further information, check Yahoo's blog about the new beta or a Messenger 9 beta demo video.

Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.
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by MrMe003 May 30, 2008 3:39 PM PDT
but like all yahoo products, no other than english UI...
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by Mr. Dee May 30, 2008 3:54 PM PDT
That emoticon is indeed scary. Anyway, is this the same version of Yahoo Messenger which is based on Windows Presentation Foundation? Have they just reverted the name to version 9 you mean instead of Yahoo! Messenger for Vista?
Reply to this comment
by PaulEdl May 30, 2008 6:57 PM PDT
At least if they base it on WPF it will run... unlike Google Gears!
by flickrz May 30, 2008 8:43 PM PDT
Wow....the best feature is call forward function. For someone like me; who has friends and families abroad it is a very good option to receive calls for very cheap ($0.01 per minute). Now, my family won't have to spend fortune in their currency to call me on my cell coz, it would be free for them and cheap for me. ;-)
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by benjiernmd May 31, 2008 5:13 AM PDT
I wish they added audio in it. I hate it when you can't video chat with your friends. So I chose to use iChat and Skype instead.
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by flickrz May 31, 2008 10:21 AM PDT
If I am not mistaken; the latest beta version for Mac do have both audio and video. Windows versions have always had them.
by gsmiller88 May 31, 2008 9:37 AM PDT
Wow, the Mac version has been in beta at least three times longer than the Windows version and it may not even be released within the year.
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by ceebee23 June 1, 2008 6:20 PM PDT
You said it! Obviously Yahoo is not really that interested in the Mac users. The beta version of Yahoo IM for Mac lacks many features and is decidedly unstable. I hope the sort it out soon... but then MSN for Mac is still lacking webcam support!!

In many ways the open source alternatives such as Adium are better than either Yahoo or MSN on the Mac!!
by benjaminstraight July 25, 2008 6:14 PM PDT
Neat app.
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