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May 07, 2007

Windows Live Hotmail Launches

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Today, Microsoft announced the availability of Windows Live Hotmail, the successor to the company's popular MSN Hotmail Web-based email service. Hotmail has been around since 1996 and now has more than 280 million active users, making it one of the most popular Web services ever created. Microsoft said Live Hotmail has the technical underpinnings to take the email service into the next decade.

"Windows Live Hotmail represents an extremely compelling end-to-end email experience that makes it easy for customers to get best-of-breed email access across PCs, mobile devices, and the Web," said Microsoft Senior Vice President Steve Berkowitz. "Windows Live Hotmail is a cornerstone online service for Microsoft and a critical part of our online advertising business because email is a key point of influence for consumer purchases."

Live Hotmail includes a new look and feel, a host of new security- and productivity-related enhancements, and some new features that will make the email service more interesting to users. For example, Microsoft is providing all Live Hotmail customers with a free version of the Microsoft Office Outlook Connector software, which lets customers use Live Hotmail natively in Outlook 2003 and Outlook 2007; previously, customers had to have a paid Hotmail or MSN account to use Outlook Connector. Soon, Microsoft will ship Windows Live Mail, its new, free, Hotmail-compatible, consumer-oriented email application for customers without Outlook. In addition, customers can now access Live Hotmail on their Windows Mobile devices via the new Windows Live Mobile client.

Microsoft also bolstered some key Hotmail services in the latest version. Email storage has been boosted from 1GB in MSN Hotmail to at least 2GB in Live Hotmail, and the company said it will continue to raise the storage limit as requested by customers. A new premium version of Live Hotmail, Windows Live Hotmail Plus, provides 4GB of storage and boosts the email attachment size from 10MB to 20MB. Live Hotmail Plus users can also utilize POP3 aggregation functionality to access other email accounts from within the Live Hotmail interface.

Microsoft said that it will roll out Live Hotmail to customers throughout the week. Existing Hotmail customers can choose to move over to Live Hotmail now or will be automatically moved over by the end of 2007. All new users will receive Live Hotmail, Microsoft said.

For more information about Live Hotmail, see my exhaustive Windows Live Hotmail review, which is now available on the SuperSite for Windows.

http://www.winsupersite.com/reviews/winlive_hotmail.asp

End of Article



Reader Comments
"For more information about this major revision to Hotmail, please see my exhaustive Windows Live Hotmail review"

"Exhaustive" and exhausting. 5,383 words for a web-based e-mail review? You've got diarrhea of the word processor. Sometimes I think folks like you and Jon Gruber write articles like this just to hear your keyboards click.

lotsamystuff May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


....and sometimes I think folks like you write comments like that just to purposefully sound like a b1tch.

XP

Waethorn May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Once again,"Waethorn", the view from your glass house has provided the kind of sparkling analysis we've come to expect from you. I see that when you don't have a point to make, you once again resort to name-calling. Sweet.

Come on, seriously...ask yourself if "Microsoft™ Windows™ Live™ Hotmail™" really warrants a 15-page review that ends with this shocking conclusion:

"I'm pretty obviously a Microsoft guy...Microsoft is the most important to me....... in my particular case, it's pretty clear that Microsoft ultimately wins out....Windows Live Hotmail looks like it's ready for the next decade. Highly recommended."

What. A. Shock.

lotsamystuff May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Seriously, though, 5400 words? For a mail client? Wow!

shark47 May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"I see that when you don't have a point to make, you once again resort to name-calling. Sweet."

Hmm, does the term d!psh!t admin ring a bell, lotsa? Those in glass houses, throw stones, etc...

However, I did not read the treatise at all, but it is almost as big as his Vista review. Way too much time spent on what is at best an evolutionary upgrade. Although, in the tech world, this is not unusual. I remember seeing a multi-page "review" by Mossberg on the iPod Video.

itpro244 May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


@lotsa: "Come on, seriously...ask yourself if "Microsoft™ Windows™ Live™ Hotmail™" really warrants a 15-page review that ends with this shocking conclusion:

"I'm pretty obviously a Microsoft guy...Microsoft is the most important to me....... in my particular case, it's pretty clear that Microsoft ultimately wins out....Windows Live Hotmail looks like it's ready for the next decade. Highly recommended."

What. A. Shock."

And why is it a shock? Because he didn't recommend GMail over Hotmail? While the review itself was a little too long, I didn't find anything "Shocking" about the conclusion. He likes it, so he's recommending it.

shark47 May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


I never thought Hotmail could look any more hideous, I was wrong. Good thing they offer users the ability to switch to classic mode.

I wonder how many of those 280 million are spam addresses.

Reflections May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Wow. The Hotmail interface looks pretty cool. Is it just me or have the display ads vanished?

shark47 May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"I see that when you don't have a point to make, you once again resort to name-calling."

....and obviously once again, you fail to see the point. of course, all you can do is sit there and b1tch and chew about anything and everything. i'm sure if you met a stranger on the street you would be the first to judge and criticize him back when he greets you. get a life, pal.

your use of Microsoft nomenclature, not to mention trademarks, is flawed, so don't even try to make fun of it. [sic]®*

Paul's review covered the integration of Windows Live Hotmail with other Windows Live services and was very informative. i would expect nothing less, and given the content to cover, it warrants being so thorough.

* registered trademark of lostahisstuff, used with absolutely no permission whatsoever.

XP

Waethorn May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


@lotsa:
"Once again,"Waethorn", the view from your glass house has provided the kind of sparkling analysis we've come to expect from you. I see that when you don't have a point to make, you once again resort to name-calling. Sweet.

Come on, seriously...ask yourself if "Microsoft™ Windows™ Live™ Hotmail™" really warrants a 15-page review that ends with this shocking conclusion:

"I'm pretty obviously a Microsoft guy...Microsoft is the most important to me....... in my particular case, it's pretty clear that Microsoft ultimately wins out....Windows Live Hotmail looks like it's ready for the next decade. Highly recommended."

What. A. Shock."

Seriously. Let's look at this post.

You started out by attacking Waethorn for pointing out that you had again made another whiny post.

You then go on to complain about a 15 page review, which you don't have to read. Included in that is your normal snarky remarks towards Microsoft (the TM every word nonsense).

"I see that when you don't have a point to make, you once again resort to [snarkiness]. Sweet."

And then you finish it out with yet another dig at Paul for admitting the fact that he is a Microsoft fan - which you have harrassed Paul about previously. Now that he admits it you then harrass him for that. "

"I see that when you don't have a point to make, you once again resort to [snarkiness]. Sweet."

My question is this - if you hate the posters here and you hate Paul and you hate Microsoft, why do you come here?

jersey72 May 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


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