Microsoft is to incorporate Facebook, MySpace and
LinkedIn updates within its flagship email program Outlook. It is a move that could get Outlook banned in offices
around the world by control freak outfits who believe that social notworking
costs them shedloads of money. (It didn't. We just wanted to annoy our staff. sub.ed.)
Microsoft dominates the market for enterprise office
productivity tools, but has come under increasing pressure from online
innovators like Google and Zoho that offer businesses decent
alternatives at
significant discounts. In a Redmond press release Microsoft said that
the public
beta of LinkedIn for Outlook will enable our millions of Office 2010
Beta users
to connect the Outlook Social Connector to a public network for the
first time. Microsoft said that it has partnered with Facebook too.
“Our vision for Outlook (and the OSC) is to provide a
communications hub that is vital to both professional and personal
communications; by integrating with both Facebook and MySpace, Outlook 2010
enables you to connect not only to co-workers and colleagues, but with all of
your friends and family within your Outlook Inbox,” Redmond said.
Current beta testers have access to the LinkedIn feature,
which puts a profile picture, contact info and status updates next to any email
sent from a LinkedIn user. The addition will be familiar to users of Xobni, a
four-year old startup whose Outlook plug-in sidebar adds LinkedIn profiles,
contact information and e-mail history with a given contact next to incoming
messages.
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Microsoft brings social notworking to Outlook
Oh dear god
no