Sunday, August 12, 2012

Microsoft Launches Outlook.com to Take on Gmail

Designed as a replacement to Hotmail, the new email service sports a very simple interface, social media integration, Skydrive and lots of tweaks. 

Microsoft has launched Outlook.com, a new web mail service, to take on the popular Gmail ever. All Hotmail or Microsoft Live users can log into Outlook.com using their existing IDs or you can create a new Outlook.com user name.

Microsoft's new email service that launches in preview, offers the first major improvement to Cloud mail in eight years, said Chris Jones, Microsoft's corporate vice president of Windows Live. “We think the time is right to reimagine personal email, from the datacenter to the user experience,” he said.”

From a cleaner look, to less obtrusive ads, to social media connections like Facebook and Twitter, the new service from Microsoft seems very aggressive.

Right in your inbox, you get o see photos of your friends, recent status updates, the ability to chat and video call and Tweets that your friend has shared with you.

It integrates with SkyDrive, so you have enough of free space, and it can open attachments right inside new Web apps for Word, Excel and PowerPoint. Its built-in Outlook chat connects to Facebook messages, and it will integrate Skype calls later this year, reports say.

Unlike Google's email service, Outlook.com doesn't personalize its ads by barging into your email content. The text-based ads appear to the left side of the inbox, and you can hide them with the chat window.

Outlook.com mail was designed to snag Gmail users first and foremost, according to Dharmesh Mehta, Microsoft's director for Windows Live product management.

You can have an Outlook id by creating an account here outlook.com

When you're viewing an email thread, the sidebar shows the sender's photo and recent Facebook and Twitter activity, which you can respond to right in line.

Outlook mail takes some of the aesthetics of the Windows 8 Metro UI and blends it with the functionality of  Hotmail.Image