I was one of the earliest users of Hotmail – back then it was sort of revolutionary that you could access email via a web browser and not depend on massive server banks running Exchange.

At the time I was running a large data center and the Exchange Admins were under my org chart – meaning all the crazy legal stuff that had to be dealt when someone decided to use their work email for porn, harassing their ex-spouse, or cheating on their current spouse. Oh, fun times… fun times. (I did escort the FBI into my building once…) I decided to hold a corporate class and teach everyone how to sign up and use their own PERSONAL email address via HoTMaiL. To this day I will never understand why people would use their work email (that is scanned, backed up, and and available to be easily monitored if the need arrises) when there are so many free email systems out there (Gmail of course being my favorite).

I distinctly remember thinking that when Microsoft bought them it meant all email would be 'in the browser' (we now mostly consider it 'cloud'). Email – and the viruses they carry – are the bane of the existence to every IT support team, but also keep a lot of them employed. 

While enterprise email hasn't quite completely taken the leap (I hear Google Apps is kicking the snot out of Microsoft Exchange in new 1k-5k seat companies) 20 years later they are finally doing SOMETHING with it.

Never did have a Yahoo email account though 😉

#blog  

Embedded Link

Microsoft Outlook: how Hotmail lost its cool
Hotmail still busiest webmail site in terms of internet traffic but recent stagnation prompted decision to relaunch as Outlook

Google+: Reshared 6 times
Google+: View post on Google+