After successfully revamping it's popular mail service Hotmail through it's look and features with the name of 'Newmail', now the software giant Microsoft has launched a new email service that shares the name of its famed email software, Outlook.
Outlook.com is accessible as a preview now, and anyone can sign up for an account. If you already have a Hotmail or Live email address, you can convert that to an Outlook.com address in the settings now. The old Hotmail/Live address remains active--users will still get mail sent to the old addresses--unless you explicitly choose to delete it. The interface is based on Metro, the user interface you see in Windows Phone and the upcoming Windows 8. This means you get a clean, uncluttered design and simple icons familiar to anyone who has used a Nokia Lumia smartphone. Microsoft is not requiring everyone that has a Hotmail account to switch to the new address, but it seems the plan is to eventually have everyone move over.
Research firm comScore says Hotmail has 41 million monthly unique
visitors; AOL, 24 million. That makes them the No. 3 and No. 4 e-mail
providers in the U.S., behind Yahoo Mail, with 84 million unique
visitors, and Gmail, 68 million. Worldwide, more than 324 million people
still use Hotmail monthly, making it the top provider globally. But
Hotmail's user base is on the decline.
Like many email clients, you get a list of folders on the left
navigation bar. What's interesting is the Quick Views dropdown below the
folders, which lets you filter certain kinds of email. By default, it
filters emails with documents or photos, flagged messages and those that
give you shipping updates. That last one will be useful for those who
frequently shop online and are always expecting packages. These
categories can be customized to suit your needs.
With Outlook.com, you can also turn on a reading pane that lets you read
the message either below or on the right of the email list. As a
security measure, it shows a blank message by default, and not the first
one in your inbox--you have to explicitly click on a message to show
it, reducing the risk of being exposed to malicious emails by accident.
On the far right is an advertisement column. This shows a random
selection, unlike Gmail, which uses targeted ads based on the content of
your email messages.
To find out more about the features and design of Outlook.com it will be best if you try it out yourself, just visit www.outlook.com and sign up for an account, or simply switch your current Hotmail/Live email to an Outlook.com one.
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