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November 3, 2009 8:25 PM PST

Microsoft gives the MSN butterfly a makeover

by Ina Fried
and
Tom Krazit
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Aiming to stay relevant, Microsoft is introducing a new look for its MSN.com home page.

Although MSN gets far less attention than the company's Bing or Windows Live efforts, the home page remains an important economic engine for Microsoft's online business, as well as a significant source of search traffic for Bing.

Along with redesigning the MSN home page, Microsoft also gave the site's butterfly logo a new look.

(Credit: Microsoft)

"We believe it's an important asset for Microsoft," said MSN general manager Bob Visse.

The site is still the top portal in about 25 of the 46 markets, with about 600 million unique users globally and 100 million in the U.S, where it trails Yahoo in popularity.

The redesign, which has been in the works for months, bears quite a bit of resemblance to the one that Microsoft had been testing in France.

Microsoft late Tuesday began rolling out the new MSN home page (click for preview), which it says will become widely available in the U.S. early in 2010.

With its new look, the home page has about half as many links as the previous incarnation, focusing instead on a few categories, such as video, news, shopping, and search.

The old site had dozens of text links at the top and bottom of the page for everything from horoscopes to white pages to a free trial of MSN's dial-up Internet service.

"It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see this is a very cluttered and busy site," Visse said of the existing page.

The company has, in the past, tried to make changes that its users saw as too radical, such as a 2007 overhaul of Hotmail that the company was forced to significantly scale back. Visse said he isn't as worried about that, given that users were already complaining that the site was both dated and overstuffed with links.

"We were, frankly, at a point where customers are complaining about the clutter," he said.

Microsoft is also trying to tap into the popularity of social networks, adding a column on the right-hand side that lets users peek at their Windows Live, Twitter, and Facebook feeds, and even update their status or post a tweet. As before, users can also see a preview of their Hotmail in-box.

But it will take its time in jumping on the Web apps bandwagon, with plans to offer several Silverlight-based apps on the right-hand side of the redesigned page at a later date. In the past, MSN users have not customized their pages to a large degree, and so Microsoft is going to take a wait-and-see approach before it decides whether it will roll out more apps than the Windows Live, Twitter, and Facebook apps available at launch.

By contrast, Yahoo, perhaps MSN's largest competitor, has bet the farm on the popularity of Web apps on the home page, redesigning the entire Yahoo experience with that in mind. It's still early, but since the redesign went live Yahoo has seen a 20 percent increase in the amount of time spent on the home page, it said last week.

The company has decided to scrap altogether a more radical overhaul that it tested in Brazil. That site, geared towards Brazil's highly social online population, allowed people to share videos by dragging the video screen onto a contact in one's social network.

"It was too radical, even for that audience," Visse said. "It's not going to ship for a final release."

MSN was among the Microsoft units hit by companywide layoffs earlier this year, but things have stabilized, Visse said.

"I wouldn't say we are growing headcount, but we aren't reducing," he said.

MSN home page redesign

The 2009 redesign of MSN features a new logo and new look with fewer links and more videos and images.

(Credit: Microsoft)

Correction, 6:35 a.m. PDT: This story initially gave an incorrect launch date for the new MSN home page.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) Showing 1 of 2 pages (43 Comments)
by sxydeeny November 3, 2009 8:34 PM PST
nice. i like the change
Reply to this comment
by NPGMBR November 4, 2009 6:23 AM PST
This change is well overdue.
by t8 November 4, 2009 1:41 PM PST
Butterfly 2.0.
It will change the world.
by cool1357 November 3, 2009 9:17 PM PST
this is AWESOME...and I love it...!
Reply to this comment
by gsmiller88 November 3, 2009 9:19 PM PST
The font is OK but the new butterfly is a bit radical.
Reply to this comment
by bsharkey November 3, 2009 9:48 PM PST
"The font is OK but the new butterfly is a bit radical. "

it's supposed to be more Windows-like, is my impression. I actually didn't hate it as much as the words.
by NPGMBR November 4, 2009 6:23 AM PST
I agree. I'm not diggin the new butterfly.
by GajaKannan November 3, 2009 9:26 PM PST
I still see the old cluttered home page (in eastern USA)...
Reply to this comment
by bsharkey November 3, 2009 9:45 PM PST
did they have to make it so G D chick-y?

my god it might as well be the logo and typeface for Lifetime network. so... weak.
Reply to this comment
by dadsgravy November 4, 2009 9:47 AM PST
It's because balls are ugly. So is anything manly. I'm not gay or weak, but I like soft pretty things. And show tunes. And body building magazines. Wait...
by rwm72 November 3, 2009 10:35 PM PST
Much better, but still looks like it was designed about 6-7 years ago. Fresher, but not as fresh as it could be.

Adobe CS1 or CS2 era design influences are evident in the logo, and as bsharkey suggests, it's quite feminine... Madame Butterly perhaps...
Reply to this comment
by cbscowards November 4, 2009 5:17 AM PST
It looks dated because they couldn't afford the time to make a better version work in IE.
by solitare_pax November 4, 2009 2:13 AM PST
Looks more like a moth than a butterfly.
Reply to this comment
by Greg465 November 4, 2009 3:27 AM PST
us page is still the same
Reply to this comment
by Super2online November 4, 2009 4:04 AM PST
The article states it won't go live until this coming Monday.
by NPGMBR November 4, 2009 6:26 AM PST
Amazing how people supposidly read the article and miss all the details.
by Jon Skillings November 4, 2009 7:31 AM PST
Microsoft says the new home page began rolling out late Tuesday (our story initially said Monday; sorry about that), but won't become widely available to U.S. customers until early next year.
by toosday November 4, 2009 3:59 AM PST
preview.msn.com

That's the URL to test out he new design. I really like the overall design, but I wish they would've kept a little bit of customization too.
Reply to this comment
by Mr. Dee November 4, 2009 4:29 AM PST
Well, if they are planning Twitter and better Windows Live integration, I just might check it out. I have not been on msn.com since testing Windows 7 build 7000. Its very slow in comparison to Yahoo! portal and I suggest Microsoft, go easy on the Silverlight pizazz, it should be a information hub, not glitz and glamor page.
Reply to this comment
by MaggieRed November 4, 2009 5:55 AM PST
msn, msnbc, nbc, nbc peacock. Enough said.

Seems to me Microsoft might be a little more concerned with being so closely associated with obama and being the press arm of the white house. Wonder if those in Redmond get thrills up their legs every time they go to work or hear obama?
Reply to this comment
by Mystigo November 4, 2009 7:59 AM PST
Obama turned me into a Newt!
by kaiman75 November 4, 2009 7:40 AM PST
@MaggieRed - What the heck are you even talking about? Put down the crack pipe your losing your grip on reality... Only people like you and crackpots like Rush Limbaugh and Alex Jones seem to find Obama in their Cracker Jack boxes.

You people make me sick... Concentration camps for right-wing activists... Obama is a Nazi... Sounds like the same sort of brainwashing to me that you claim Obama is doing to turn us all into socialists. You need to wake up and think for yourself, or get a bigger shovel to clear the BS out of your head.
Reply to this comment
by Michichael November 4, 2009 8:10 AM PST
Oh noes kaiman! You used the word cracker! You must be racist! :P
by kewell82 November 4, 2009 8:32 AM PST
So what your saying is you want the government to be in control of everything. Gee, what kind of government is that? People like Limbaugh, Jones (There are others but if I mention them you will freak out) and probably 75% of the US want less government control.
by shycelticwitch November 4, 2009 9:02 AM PST
kewell82... The government needs to control big business NOW, since only 1% of the population of this country is benefiting from the way things are now. Aren't you sick and tired of watching banks fail, and watching Obama hand out money to fix the mess that Bush allowed to happen while he sat back and played "battleship" with our forces? As far as I am concerned, people like Palin, Cheney, Rubio, Beck and Limbaugh should be locked in a room with a dozen homeless people, and left there for a few days.
by MaggieRed November 4, 2009 9:03 AM PST
I am glad I make you sick. That made my day. Thanks for the support and endorsement.

Have you ever studied American history or our Founding Fathers? Well your comment proves not, I guess you answered who is the intelligent one.
by kewell82 November 4, 2009 1:01 PM PST
So shycelticwitch, what your saying is that you want to be like Russia and China. Let's spread the wealth and see what happens. I'll tell you what will happen. People will get lazy and will expect the government to make all of their decisions and control their life. Is that what you want?
by Lennron November 4, 2009 1:41 PM PST
It's funny how this turned into a political discussion. I actually agree with shyceltic for once. Bush destroyed the economy, end of story. Now everybody expects the government to fix it, but don't want the government to do anything at the same time. Hell, maybe the greedy rich people that got us into this mess will suddenly have a change in heart and fix everything, right? Who needs regulation?!
by FreddieJoeNunn November 4, 2009 8:29 AM PST
This is gonna go over big with the "never changed the default homepage in IE" crowd.

GAMECHANGER
Reply to this comment
by ZetaZeta_ November 4, 2009 1:16 PM PST
In the past I always believed Live.com (instead of msn.com) would have been a more elegant default homepage.
by abcd9009 November 4, 2009 8:53 AM PST
Looks much better but I never go to MSN. It's either Google or Yahoo.
Reply to this comment
by shycelticwitch November 4, 2009 9:10 AM PST
all you are missing is the red, and you'd have a great new symbol for gay pride... how utterly "chic".
Reply to this comment
by ZetaZeta_ November 4, 2009 1:17 PM PST
So what about the NBC logo?
by shycelticwitch November 5, 2009 7:40 AM PST
As "fruity as they get, that one!
by Ted Miller November 4, 2009 11:21 AM PST
I think a butterfly squished against an Apple or Ubuntu windshield would be something better for a logo.
Reply to this comment
by jtjt145 November 4, 2009 12:48 PM PST
Maybe, the new logo for Micro$oft should be a flying pig!
Or maybe a flying Ballmer, squirting indiscriminately ....
Reply to this comment
by Dalkorian November 4, 2009 5:20 PM PST
eeewwww
by t8 November 4, 2009 1:39 PM PST
Wow, Microsoft have a new butterfly. Watch out Google.
Reply to this comment
by Dalkorian November 4, 2009 5:20 PM PST
Hey, it's easier than fixing their excrement-filled code!
:D
by empirestatebuddy November 4, 2009 6:24 PM PST
Why do they use a butterfly? It just seems kind of girlie... and butterflies, while pretty, can't really fly very well. I don't know... it just seems like a poor choice of a mascot for an internet brand, in my opinion.
Reply to this comment
by john94857 November 4, 2009 10:18 PM PST
The new site looks excellent, though I agree that they don't necessarily have to use the butterfly, but overall the design is quite pleasant and refined.
Reply to this comment
Showing 1 of 2 pages (43 Comments)
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About Beyond Binary

During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft.


Beyond Binary is a look at how technology is changing our lives and the people behind all that life-changing stuff, with an extra emphasis on that which emanates from Redmond, Wash.

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