Microsoft to pull Facebook, MySpace into Outlook
SEATTLE (AP) — Microsoft Corp. is taking another step toward turning Outlook, its desktop e-mail program, into a hub for information from popular social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace.
Today, Microsoft is releasing a "beta" test version of the Outlook Social Connector.
The add-on software, which was first discussed last November, adds a new pane to the main e-mail reading screen on Outlook. When a user clicks to read an e-mail message, the new pane fills up with the sender's most recent social-networking activities. Those could include the addition of a professional contact on LinkedIn or a "what I'm doing now" status update from Facebook.
Microsoft has a mixed record when it comes to Web trends.
The company's free Hotmail and Windows Live Messenger programs are widely used, but its Windows Live blog/social network didn't pick up much steam in the face of competition from Facebook.
In this case, a small startup called Xobni already has built an Outlook add-on that combines inbox search with content from Facebook, LinkedIn and others.
Microsoft's new software also treats Outlook itself as a social network. If the e-mail sender and recipient are jointly working on a document stored on a company's Sharepoint server, both will see updates if one logs on to make edits.
For now, the new software doesn't let people use Outlook to push information back up to LinkedIn, Facebook or other sites.
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