New Windows Live Hotmail arrives…

… just not for everyone. Apparently, Microsoft is rolling it out in phases because of the enormous size of their user base. Here’s a post from the folks at Windows Live Wire (the official Microsoft Live blog) describing the update, which does indeed look sweet:

Hotmail update coming soon

It’s late September already, and time for that inevitable question: what did you do on your summer vacation? Well, this summer, the Hotmail team and I were hard at work on a new version of Hotmail, and we’re super excited to start rolling it out to you very soon.

Here’s a sneak peak at some of the changes.

A great new look – We’ve done a little remodeling, and we think Hotmail looks much, much nicer and is easier to use. We did a lot of testing around the world to see what people liked and didn’t like. We’re really excited about the final results, and we hope you like it too! There’s also a whole new set of vibrant themes that replace our old color schemes.

Classic & Full, together at last! – Our clever developers figured out how to take the performance of the Classic version of Hotmail, and combine it with features of the Full version, in a single experience. Now everyone gets the same features. You don’t have to trade off speed for functionality or decide which version is better for you. If you have been using the Full version, you’ll see much faster page load times, and if you have been using Classic, you now get to use the reading pane, drag & drop, and other features formerly limited to the Full version.

A contact list that’s more than just contacts – Our contact list is now much more useful. Besides a new layout and improved look, we added features that are both fun and time-saving.

  • Fun - If your Messenger contacts have a display picture, that picture will appear in your list.
  • Time-saving - When you view a contact, you can see recent e-mail they’ve sent you, send them a message from right in the contact page, and view items from across Windows Live that you’ve shared together.

Now THAT’s something to write home about! – We completely redesigned the experience of composing a new message. We have brand new auto-complete functionality for e-mail addresses, and a new contact picker that even detects commonly misspelled addresses. There is a new way to attach files and a new spell-checker that we think are much easier to use (especially if you were using Classic – no need to go to a new page to attach files anymore!). The text editor is completely rewritten, and we fixed a bunch of bugs – right-click now works!

Updated Calendar beta – If you aren’t using the Calendar beta yet, now’s a great time to try it. Calendar sharing, an automatically generated birthday calendar for people in your contact list, a holiday calendar, iCal subscriptions to public calendars, to-do lists, and much, much more await you. Go to http://calendar.live.com, or go to Hotmail and click Calendar under “Related places” to sign up.

There is more to this release that I haven’t yet mentioned, including greater speed and more powerful spam fighting, and even more improvements coming soon (but I’ll save those for a later post that my boss is going to do.)

If you haven’t used your Hotmail account in a while, check out the changes at http://mail.live.com. You can also sign up for a new account from there.

I think this version is a big improvement in both appearance and performance, so I hope you love it!

- Mike Schackwitz, Lead Program Manager, Windows Live Hotmail

Microsoft has been working on combining the "Classic” and “full” Hotmail experiences for years; in fact, their goal was to do so in the original revamp from a few years ago. But they got a lot of complaints from Hotmail old-timers. My guess is this won’t end.

Still, it looks great. I just wish I could use it.

Discuss this Article 19

Waethorn
on Sep 30, 2008
Neet. I'll continue using Outlook.
tayme
on Sep 30, 2008
@LotsaWaethorn - Check your spelling...Are you talking about the ladies hair removal product or "Not currently engaged in Employment, Education or Training"? http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/neet --tayme
tayme
on Sep 30, 2008
Oops...since we are on spelling here, I should have used the possessive lady's rather than the plural ladies. My apologies. --tayme
scoobyclub
on Sep 30, 2008
I think you could could have got away with ladies as an adjective there. Probably make more sense than your correction. However, I don't really do English well.
RaaJ
on Sep 30, 2008
Tayme - do you have anything to add to the discussions here, apart from personal attacks on Mike Galos and Waethorn? Grow up !
Ocean
on Sep 30, 2008
Interesting comments from the blogosphere: >>Microsoft is dying from the inside, and the folks sucking it dry have zero motivation to change things. It's working out pretty damn well for them.<< http://minimsft.blogspot.com/2008/09/compensatory-arrangements-of-certai... >>
subzerohitman721
on Sep 30, 2008
I look foward to checking it out as I've been a long time Hotmail user.
Waethorn
on Sep 30, 2008
"Are you talking about the ladies hair removal product" At least my name doesn't sound like women's conditioner....
Tero
on Sep 30, 2008
"Oops...since we are on spelling here, I should have used the possessive lady's rather than the plural ladies. My apologies. --tayme" You ought to have used the possessive plural ladies'. What comes to Hotmail, the more interesting question here is whether the thing actually works now. Or to put it another way, will the new Hotmail lose less mail than the old one? And could there be a day in the yet unforeseeable future when Hotmail would not lose a single message from a trusted-as-spam-free contact? You know, it would work as an email service. That would be something! I doubt that. Hence we still need real email service providers with fast IMAP, reliable message delivery, better spam tools, filters, aliases etc. Free* just doesn't buy quality. * = Of course, nothing is really free, ever. Either one pays money or watches advertisement.
gorath
on Sep 30, 2008
Waethorn, what exactly is a women's conditioner? Does it make women soft, full of body and shiny? :D
lotsamystuff
on Sep 30, 2008
"@LotsaWaethorn - Check your spelling...Are you talking about the ladies[sic] hair removal product..." I'm no Waethorn. And Waethorn is no lady. Sorry to drop a [sic] bomb on you, but you brought that one on yourself. :-) <-----the all-forgiving SMILE of forgiveness.
treestman
on Sep 30, 2008
They removed the "Check Mail" button. That irks me.
shark47
on Sep 30, 2008
"They removed the "Check Mail" button. That irks me. " Maybe it's like GMail now.
Waethorn
on Sep 30, 2008
"Waethorn, what exactly is a women's conditioner? Does it make women soft, full of body and shiny? :D" I sure hope so.... (don't forget "bouncy"!)
DRWAM
on Sep 30, 2008
"They removed the "Check Mail" button. That irks me. " "Maybe it's like GMail now." I thought it was just me, not able to find it! Thanks. We still need IMAP and iPhone support [all Live services].
shark47
on Sep 30, 2008
"We still need IMAP and iPhone support [all Live services]." I will too, when I get my iPod Touch delivered this week. I thought IzyMail looked OK, but the damn thing is not free.
Waethorn
on Sep 30, 2008
"We still need IMAP" Honestly, I don't see the point. It's the same as the "leave messages on server" option in most POP3-supported email programs, except that you can read, delete, and synchronize at a later time when a connection allows.
DRWAM
on Oct 1, 2008
Sharkster, if you don't have Exchange, you can use gmail calender. Gmail has a utility that does two syncing with Outlook calendar and works great, allowing you to choose interval syncing [every hour or minutes, etc...]. Also, there is an iPhone app called Saisuke for $10 that is a separate calendar app which does use Apple's calender. It looks pretty nice and I may buy it. It works with the touch too. http://www.saysoftware.net/saisuke_i/SaiSukeTop_E.html
Tero
on Oct 1, 2008
> > We still need IMAP > Honestly, I don't see the point. I don't see how anyone could get by with these awful AJAXed candy-coloured lollipop UI's that look, feel and act like a child's toy. Seriously. AJAX seems like the latest excuse for making bad UI's. Do the developers actually use these things? I've been let to believe Google developers do use GMail. Maybe this is why it is the least bad of the popular webmail UI's. It is also the least toy-like, and thus, ah, also the least exciting, the least rewarding as a plaything, if one believes all the reviews.

Please or Register to post comments.

IT/Dev Connections

Las Vegas
September 30th - October 4th

Paul ThurottYou'll have the opportunity to experience:
• 120 Technical
Sessions
• Networking with Peers
• Expert Speakers


Come See Paul Thurrott & Mary Jo Foley in Person!

Register Now

Office 365 InfoCenter

Get the latest insight and info from Paul

Read Now!

What I Use