Use Hotmail Features Without Changing Your Email Address

This is big news, especially for those looking to adopt Windows Phone. According to Microsoft...

The Windows Live team has announced the addition of EASI ID to Hotmail, which allows users to use Hotmail with any existing email address, similar to how email clients like Microsoft Outlook work. Today, most people have more than one email address. With that in mind, we implemented this to give users all the benefits of Hotmail, without the hassle of changing their email address and potentially losing contact with friends from these other accounts. The feature has begun to roll out today, and it will be available to all users worldwide in the next few days. To try it out, users just need to register and validate their email address.

Here's the word from the Windows Live team blog:

We understand. You already have at least one email address and you probably don’t need another. You may also use your existing address for things other than just email, such as signing in to online shopping sites, which makes changing even more challenging. Also, you might have an address that you really like, but a similar name might not be available on another email service. So we looked for a way to make it easier for people to give Hotmail a trial run.

Today we begin rolling out a feature that makes it easy to use Hotmail with any existing email address. Just as you can use Microsoft Outlook with an address from any service, you can now do the same with Hotmail on the web.

To try it out, you just need to register and validate your email address. Over 30 million people have already registered an email address from another service when signing up for a Windows Live ID to use Xbox, Zune, SkyDrive, or Messenger. If you've done the same, then go to www.hotmail.com and sign in with your Windows Live ID. If you don't have a Windows Live ID, you can sign up for a new Hotmail account now and use your own email address when registering.

Hotmail will guide you through connecting to your old service and importing your existing email using POP, and then you can begin sending and receiving mail from Hotmail with your existing address.

As I mentioned earlier, we’re just starting to roll out this change today, so it may take a few days to reach all of our customers worldwide. When it does, please give it a try, and let me know how it’s working for you.

Discuss this Article 7

Andreas J
on Nov 1, 2010
Does this mark the beginning of Microsoft rolling-out features to Windows Live without waiting a few years in-between?
nutmac
on Nov 1, 2010
This feature would've been awesome if it supported IMAP as well. POP is rather useless for me.
gorath
on Nov 1, 2010
I was under the impression you could do this already, really. Shame they still don't support doing it over IMAP.
roncerr
on Nov 1, 2010

In the link you provided there were comments including questions about how this differs from what the users claim they are already doing with Hotmail. Personally, I wonder how this may or not change the way I use Windows Live Mail (the desktop client). For example I and many other WLM users lament the loss of the simple interface of Outlook Express and Windows Mail with the unified inbox, sent, deleted, drafts, and other folders for all accounts. Referring us to Microsoft is little help since they can't explain there own stuff.

realtestman
on Nov 2, 2010
The unified inbox is still there in Windows Live Mail, actually. It's under "Storage Folders". If you get seperate accounts listed, then you're not using POP3 (using IMAP or HTTP), which was the exact same behaviour in Outlook Express.
roncerr
on Nov 2, 2010

The storage folders only work if you set up message rules to direct mail from the inbox of each pop3 account to a folder in the storage area. Also, it doesn't work for sent items since the sent items part of the storage folders only applies to IMAP accounts and you can't make a rule for sent items.

Waethorn
on Nov 3, 2010
I can't stand unified inboxes. I want to have separate inboxes so I know which account emails were sent to without looking at the header. I prioritize responses depending on which email account messages come into, as well. Also, it's easier to manage newsletters and spam with separate inboxes. I want to know if certain accounts are getting newsletters, because some accounts shouldn't get newsletters at all. I keep work email separate from personal stuff, but I still like to be able to check on personal email at the same time. Some work contacts that I have a good relationship with also have my personal email address because they can track me down easier with it, while there are some business contacts that I don't want to be able to track me down, so they don't get that level of access and that all works together with IM and presence awareness.

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