New Hotmail Integrates Office Features 90
angry tapir writes "Microsoft is set to begin rolling out the latest enhancements to its Hotmail (warning: interstitial ad) web mail service, with an aim to reduce clutter and make it easier to send photos and handle Office documents. Microsoft is making a Web-based version of Office available from within Hotmail's Web interface that allows use of Microsoft document formats such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote."
Hotmail? (Score:4, Funny)
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They didn't go out of business, Microsoft bought them and that was post-'97 (I think it was around '99). I had a pre-MS account but have since closed that one. I still have one hotmail address (I used to have three), though.
Re:Hotmail? (Score:5, Funny)
You're thinking of http://hotmale.com/ [hotmale.com]
Resistance is futile. (Score:2)
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Wannabee fools. (Score:5, Interesting)
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From a security standpoint, I have often wanted to be able to generate something like a one time password when logging in through a public computer.
One thing, OneNote (Score:2, Interesting)
IFF, Microsoft offers the OneNote program online (for free) and manages to integrate it in a sensible way to Hotmail, I might be sold.
Currently I am using Google Notebook (I was lucky to get an account before they closed the subscriptions) to organize my life. I have really tried to use other online alternatives (like Zoho) but they just do not feel right.
On the other hand, the times when I have used OneNote, it has *really* impressed me. That is a really good program.
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They're basically planning to, once the release of office 2010 hits the shelves next month. Onenote should be available via skydrive when office 2010 is released, so you can sync locally, on skydrive, with phones, etc.
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I know! I liked hotmail because it meant I could escape the dreaded Power Point Presentation...
Why must they make the laser sound effect for every letter flying in from the side of the screen. Make it stop!
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I watched the video introduction, and do you know what I thought about Powerpoint files? She e-mailed a file to herself so that she could work at home?!? What? Really?
Come on. This isn't the 90s anymore. MS should at least have promoted SkyDrive, or if they wanted to promote in-email editing, said that she was working with a frie ... never mind. That second one would be stupid, too. There's no reason to attach a file so you or someone else can edit it at home. In short, I think the new Office-for-attachment
Re:Wannabee fools. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Microsoft's strategy has been to let some other company prove there is a market for a particular function then buy a competing product and gradually improve it (and modify the OS so that the competitor doesn't run as well) until they take over the market
FTFY
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Huh? I thought that was Google's strategy?
Google Groups, Maps, Blogger, AdWords, Gmail, Desktop, Talk, Youtube..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_acquisitions_by_Google [wikipedia.org]
Maybe they copied it from Microsoft.
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Seriously?
You must be GNU here
Almost all of Microsoft's "innovation" has come through aquisitions and mergers [wikipedia.org].
Of course to look at a successful company and not learn the lesson of their success would be foolish...NO?
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To be fair, Google also did a 'me too' since they bought the companies Upstartle and 2Web Technologies to get word processing and spreadsheet components of Google Docs. There were other paid services that did the same thing too. Also Microsoft haven't only just realised to do this now. It was announced back in October 2008.
And frankly, who cares if it has been done before. There is no doubt that Microsoft's Office Web Apps will be a great step up from Google Docs in terms of functionality, but the requireme
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I just read on the Wikipedia page [wikipedia.org] that Silverlight is optional. Oops, TFA says the same thing. It will be interesting to see how useful it is without the client side plug in.
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Your memory is a little generous. Hotmail had an insanely low 2mb limit at one time!!! A few e-mails would freeze your inbox. Only after gmail appeared were they so generous to offer 100mb.
Yep. It was $10 an month (or year) to raise that to 10mb if I recall correctly.
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where were they up until google did it ?
Waiting for Google to do it.
they realized to do this just now ?
Right. Because Google hires geniouses while Microsoft hires stupid noobs.
all they are doing is 'me too' for a long while now.
Why hello there, Captain Obvious.
Why does everyone act surprised or disgusted or flabberghasted that a huge successful company could maintain its success by building on other peoples' innovations? Either their business model is stupid, and their stock will tank and their sales will drop off and they will go bankrupt, or their business model works. I'm not saying I like their business model, or agree with it,
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where were they up until google did it ? they realized to do this just now ? all they are doing is 'me too' for a long while now.
I dunno where they've been... but what's to say that sending emails in doc format wont somehow become standard for Hotmail users? It'll look and work just like regular email when using Hotmail and such, but to those who dont (gMail users, Yahoo, etc), the email will have to be opened with provided or installed Word readers.
That'd be interesting. I seem to remember something similar happening in the early days of Hotmail with non-standard text markup being used.
I'm not suggesting this is their eventual m
Open Document (Score:5, Interesting)
I usually use Linux and I want to avoid lock-in. Microsoft Office supports the OpenDocument format, so how about these Microsoft services? And with OpenDocument I mean the Oasis format, not OpenXML (which I don't trust to be suffiently interoperable).
It looks like you're using hotmail... (Score:5, Funny)
Would you like me to interconnect every program Microsoft has to offer to your account so that way you can be tied to us forever?
Yes/No
It looks like you've said "No". Are you sure?
Yes/No
I'm sorry, but it appears you keep clicking on "No". I believe you meant to click "Yes."
Is this correct?
Yes/Yes
Ok, great! Downloading files....12567 of 9,324,456,765 Bytes downloaded.
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Sorry for being the Boolean Nazi, but on the second question the "wrong" (i.e. anti-MS) answers is "Yes" (Are you sure? Yes ... it appears you keep clicking on "Yes").
Apart from that... LOL
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Seems coherent to me.
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I meant the second question, i.e. "It looks like you've said "No". Are you sure?" - In which the sane user would answer "Yes" (I'm sure I don't need your Hotmail interconnection) - And then the program should say you keep pressing "Yes", etc...
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My parent's freeview recorder has a similar one to that last :
Are you sure you want to cancel this reservation?
Yes/Cancel
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Step 3 is more like ???
PROFIT!!!?
No, seriously, step 3 is more like, "you have to press 'Yes' to continue"
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No, seriously, step 3 is more like, "you have to press 'Yes' to continue"
Unless I am missing what you are saying, that was step 3
Losing (Score:3, Interesting)
Heh. Once again we have MS playing catch-up to Google. I thought Hotmail was turned into Windows Live or something like that anyhow.
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It was, but it's still called hotmail and you can still reach it via www.hotmail.com (it just redirects).
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Yes, never mind that Microsoft had an office suite for a good decade before Google even existed, and that its offline version has always had and continues to have a mound more useful features than Google Docs, and that its launched web version has many more features than Google Docs.
You Google fanboys are tedious. You don't even know why you like them.
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Well, I googled "Why I like google" and received 503,000,000 responses, so yeah, I don't know why I like google since I haven't read all of them yet. ;-)
Re:Losing (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, that's just a mixture between your and Google's incompetence. If you put it in quotes, nearer 383,000. If you browse to the last page of results, about 199.
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I binged "why i like microsoft" [bing.com], and received 133 hits.
In comparison, bing gives 211.000.000 hits for why i like google [bing.com].
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That should be "why i like google", with quotes.
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That should be "why i like google", with quotes.
It was with quotes. Look at his link:
http://www.bing.com/search?q="why+i+like+google"
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Just leave Microsoft alone!
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Wasn't OP telling MS to leave Google alone?
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That would be me & no I wasn't. :D
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You don't even know why you like them.
"Not Corporate Borg" is my favorite brand.
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Indeed. The desire for all information to go through one entity is very Borg-ish.
Re:Losing (Score:5, Informative)
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I don't think Google is all that interested in on-premise software. On-premise is valued by sysadmins because they perceive themselves as in control of the system. Once online companies can start delivering software that equals the reliability and UI quality of local apps, you're going to see a huge migration away from locally maintained software. Obviously, that's a tall order and not something we're going to see for a few years. But give the cloud another decade and people will wonder that every mid-s
Spam? (Score:1)
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Why would I want to open all my spam in Office?
Because all the best email viruses have word and excel macros built in...you can't open those in Google Docs.
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Not only spam, but everyone can read your spam, and your email, and your online office documents!
The last paragraph of the article:
"Later this year, Microsoft plans on introducing SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) encryption for Hotmail, although the company has not decided whether it will be optional or not, Mehta said."
Nice.
sigh... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Google Docs is still pretty atrocious at handling any formatting quirks of Office file types, and given that MS Office is still the most popular suite to format things in (for better or worse), Hotmail could have a strong selling point above Google in this regard.
*Disclosure* I use Google Docs almost exclusively for my academic and pe
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Or not.
That windows computer (my work laptop, parents computer, whatever) has most likely some version of Office installed. So Ill just use that.
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Why not? Have you used it? What are you basing your opinion on?
If a business already has Office under certain volume licenses from Microsoft, they already have a license to deploy the on-premise version. Businesses are going to use this massively.
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Nice to see the mods aren't at all biased today...
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The truth is Google Docs is still nothing more than the web version of Write/Wordpad (maybe only with the added ability to put tables... which do not work so well). A much better implementation is the one from Zoho.
If the online version of Word is as complete as say, OpenOffice then it will be much better than Google Docs.
Late, yes... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Yeah, but will it work with non-IE browsers?
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Well color me surprised.
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Firefox - yes, Safari and Chrome - maybe, Opera - probably not.
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Win and Mac, yes. Linux, no.
Re:Late, yes... (Score:4, Insightful)
Silverlight is a turd on fire (Score:1)
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Umm. I just imported an OOWriter doc. Are you using the incomplete, new interface or something?
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ActiveX, huh?? This is not 1998...
Re:ActiveX? (Score:4, Informative)
According to Wikipedia: Supported web browsers include Internet Explorer 7 and later, Mozilla Firefox 3.5 and later and Safari 4. In another thread, I just criticised the Microsoft web apps for requiring Silverlight, but I just read that according to Wikipedia it was: optional and its availability will only "enhance the user experience, resulting in sharper images and improved rendering."
I should have read TFA.
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Live Workspace is an old thing, and is not the same as Office Web Apps / SkyDrive.
Now, I haven't found any place that'd list system requirements (and specifically browser/OS) for Office as exposed on SkyDrive, but it is reasonable to assume that they will be the same as for Office Web Apps in SharePoint 2010 - after all, it's supposed to be the same code. And for those, Firefox on Linux is explicitly supported [msdn.com]. No Opera on the list, though - a pity.
Inter-what? (Score:1)
Wait, wait, wait, I'm sure I've seen this before (Score:2)
Let me think ... integrated e-mail, search engine and online office suite. I'm sure I've seen that before. Now it comes to bing and hotmail, but I'm sure I've seen it in some other search engine that also has an e-mail service. I can't seem to remember the name right now.
Anyway, Congratulations microsoft! Definitely original and innovative new product, as usual.
Interstitial ad (Score:2)
But seriously, all I use my Hotmail account for is logging into messenger (using an app called 'A-Patch' to remove ads there as well) and as a dumping ground for spam.
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(using an app called 'A-Patch' to remove ads there as well).
A-Patch always seemed very very suspicious to me on casual glance whenever I went looking for something to get rid of MSN ads.
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Login-ID (Score:1)
They can spend millions in trying to integrate office in to hotmail and yet every time I enter my user-id I have to put the "@hotmail.com" Really? You couldn't check to see if I put in hotmail.com in my address bar and then just assume that? I can understand if I linked from MSN.com and you gave a drop down for it. At least make it a drop down so I don't have to type the damn thing out.
"Already done" (Score:2)
I guess since it's already been done, we don't want anyone else to do it. Competition is bad. And stupid. Once an idea has been done, it's futile to try to improve on it in any way, or implement it for your own clients.
Most of the Slashdot posts so far appear to be saying that it's "just Microsoft playing catchup, as always" as if that is always a bad thing. I guess Microsoft should be the lead innovator in every single area, and if another company comes out with a good idea, Microsoft should not offer