Windows Live Messenger 9: my new best friend

By | August 31, 2008, 8:00pm PDT

Summary: What’s this? Posting at 4am in the morning? Are you kidding me? No. I can’t sleep. Ahh, a sigh of relief, a breath of fresh air, freshly ironed underwear, or the first sip of an ice cold beer after a crap day at work. All these combined make the new, pre-release (even then, it was leaked [...]

What’s this? Posting at 4am in the morning? Are you kidding me? No. I can’t sleep.

Ahh, a sigh of relief, a breath of fresh air,wlm9.png freshly ironed underwear, or the first sip of an ice cold beer after a crap day at work. All these combined make the new, pre-release (even then, it was leaked - badly) version of Windows Live Messenger a lovely piece of kit.

For many a year, I’ve been juggling different services - MySpace (at the time), then Facebook, Windows Live Messenger, Ranger Outpost, and good old fashioned coin-operated email to connect with my friends and colleagues to collaborate on projects together. This, quite frankly, was a right royal pain in the butt, as I have a severe memory deficiency when it comes to remember what I’m doing, my usernames and passwords, and who I’m supposed to be talking to next.

WLM9 as it shall be known herein, now does pretty much anything I need to get work done. Provided that person(s) are using a version of Windows Live Messenger, then it makes life so much easier.

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I can group certain contacts together to separate out my personal contacts from my work contacts, and collaborate with them independently or collectively. I can change those people’s sign-in sounds to something loud and intrusive, so I’ll be able to hear them whilst in the next room as they sign-in - allowing me to bug them for a group project code revision I’ve been asking for all last week.

I can send a screenshot or a photo, using a new feature called PhotoShare, to a friend and it’ll allow them to share things back in a “full-window” environment, cutting out the need for a full blown conversation window and using that space more wisely for what we need.

However, if people add me on Messenger and spam me with Viagra, cheap mobile ringtones and other crap like that, I can completely block and remove them from my Live ID, contacts and suchlike, whilst reporting it to Microsoft and letting them know they have a spammer - all with a (couple of) click of a mouse.

I can appear in two places at once; something we can’t ordinarily do, but this way we can be at work or at home, in a Starbucks or at the university library and not be disconnected from the service. This allows for wherever I am, my contacts can still interact with me and share their documents and thoughts regardless of whether I’m in a fixed location or not.

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Of course, because I’m a student and most of the time I’m hammered, I’ll get excited by something as little as a red shiny ball… a bit like Bush really. The flip side to the student-related work aspects, I like a bit of shiny-shiny.

“Yeah, check out my MySpace page, along with my favourite songs and movies, and things that other people have created, but I use to express my individualism…. Maybe so, but now I can use animated display pictures to really show the world what I’m thinking or what’s going on in my head. See, there’s a dancing badger. Point made.

Because the whole application is made with .NET Framework 3, or as I still call it, “WPF” from back in the Longhorn days, it means the eye-candy really works well on Vista. Don’t bother bitching about Vista here - the point is, this new client adds glossy effects, shiny glowing text and allows you to smoothly extend your conversation windows.

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There’s no difference to the webcam feature; still the same old quality we had before. The sound on the other hand seems to have improved. On my works laptop, Windows XP Professional, the cracking has reduced and northern-England accents are easier to understand (strangely). This may or may not tie in with the removal of the Windows Live Call feature, which no longer appears as part of Messenger.

Voice-over-Messenger for me is more preferable to Skype; the quality seems about the same and all of my contacts are in Messenger, so there’s little point in using yet another service.

There have been rumours that Google Talk and Windows Live Messenger 9 interoperability is round the corner. Maybe so, but there’s nothing working between the current Google client and the pre-release WLM9 client at the moment. Tried it and it failed miserably; stuck in a limbo of inviting people to either service without actually getting anywhere.

Wave 3 of the Windows Live product suite hits private beta next week, but until then, keep your eye on LiveSide as the chances are, those devious little buggers will have something before even “the evil queen of numbers” does.

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Topics

Zack Whittaker, a criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, Canterbury, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

Disclosure

Zack Whittaker

I worked briefly with Microsoft UK in 2006 but no longer have any connection with the company. Regardless, I remain impartial and unbiased in my views.

I don't hold any stock or shares, investments or industrial secrets in any company, but have signed confidentiality agreements with a number of UK and U.S. organisations, whose names I am not at liberty to disclose.

I was involved with Kent Union, the University of Kent's student union, undertaking voluntary, non-salaried, elected positions between early 2009 and mid-2010.

No other company, body, government department, non-governmental organisation or third sector organisation employs me or pays me a salary in any capacity whatsoever.

As a freelance journalist, whenever expenses are given and taken by a company that is not CBS Interactive, these will be disclosed in each relevant post to ensure transparency.

I currently work with a UK law enforcement unit, but this is an entirely separate position which bears no connection to other work.

(Updated: 23rd October 2011)

Biography

Zack Whittaker

Zack Whittaker, criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, UK, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

After studying criminology at university, though still in his early-20's, he has already had a series unconventional work and voluntary positions. He has worked with researchers studying neurological illnesses like Tourette's syndrome (which he suffers from), has given lectures on the nature of disabilities in the public community, and occasionally ends up speaking on television and radio discussing the events of the day.

He first had academic work published at the age of 22, then still an undergraduate, and has been cited by a wide range of publications: from the Huffington Post, Business Insider, AllThingsDigital, The Atlantic Wire and CBS News.

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Nothing to see here, keep moving.
caspianhiro 2nd Sep 2008
Yahoo, Google and AIM already have those features either shipping or in their late betas. What's the big deal?
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Cryptic?
mcfaul@... 1st Sep 2008
Whats with the secret message in the article?
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Contributr
LiveSide...
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thats one reason not to consider it..
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Contributr
It's the only way they keep the software free. Why d'ya think this website's packed with adverts? Most advertisements keep websites nice and free for people, but also pay the authors rightfully what they deserve happy
I only really want one thing from my instant messenger, which nobody has yet so I need to go to third parties to get: One common client. Why oh why are companies still using divided networks and different protocols?

I could easily have a dozen clients installed on my computer for all of the networks my friends have decided to use. Luckily, there's Trillian and Pidgin.

Thanks, but no thanks. I'm not switching to any new Live Messenger until the IM industry cleans up its act. If Microsoft wants me to use Live Messenger, they'll give up this "we need our own network and protocol" attitude and make their client work with everybody else.
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Ditto.
caspianhiro 2nd Sep 2008
It's silly that we've been messing with IM for almost 10 years, and there is still so little interoperability.

This is arrogance and corporate stupidity at its finest.

If you represent ANY of these proprietary products, you are an doodie head. (it would let me say @#%&!)

The fact that there are so many 3rd party interoperable clients just shows that the MS/Google/Yahoo/AIMs of the world are liars.
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Nothing to see here, keep moving.
caspianhiro 2nd Sep 2008
Yahoo, Google and AIM already have those features either shipping or in their late betas. What's the big deal?

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