Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Data Storage

Hotmail Revs E-Mail Space Race

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Hotmail Revs E-Mail Space Race

For the first time, Microsoft has passed Google in the race to offer Web users the most e-mail storage space. Microsoft's Hotmail will now feature 5 GB of storage for general users and 10 GB for paid accounts. The amount surpasses Google's 2.5 GB of storage for free Gmail accounts.


Success is just a matter of knowing the right "secrets." Download the free eBook, "The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales." You will discover the fastest, most effective ways to grow your business and still have time to live your life.

In the race for message storage space among Web-based e-mail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse providers, Microsoft's (Nasdaq: MSFT) Hotmail has just leapfrogged Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG) Gmail.

Customers with a free Hotmail account now will have 5 GB of storage; those with a paid account will have 10 GB, according to a posting on the Microsoft Live Hotmail community blog by Ellie Powers-Boyle, program manager.

This compares with the just above 2.5 GB that Google provides users of free Gmail accounts. Thus, Hotmail has once again stepped up in the competition for the loyalty of Web-based e-mail users.

The move likely will be enough to keep existing Hotmail users in the fold, Rob Enderle, principal analyst with Enderle Group, told TechNewsWorld. However, Hotmail service upgrades may not be enough to lure users away from competing services.

Need for Speed

In addition to the increased storage, Hotmail users will see better speed performance on the system, said Powers-Boyle. This, she noted, has been a big issue among customers providing feedback to the Hotmail development team.

The upgrade also includes a tool for eliminating duplicate entries in the Hotmail contact list and provides for longer retention of messages in folders holding junk and deleted messages. Users now can disable the "Today" page that automatically displays MSN news items and open directly to their Hotmail inbox if they wish. The changes will be rolled out over the next few weeks, said Powers-Boyle.

POP Goes the Customer

What the new Microsoft Live Hotmail does not provide -- much to users' disappointment according to comments on the blog announcement -- is support for POP3 (post office protocol version 3). Gmail and Yahoo Mail allow users to download messages using client software as Thunderbird or Eudora on their own computers. However, Hotmail still does not.

This issue affects not only customers accessing Web-based e-mail through their personal computer, but also that fast-growing group of users who use their mobile phones as a primary communications tool. The edge, though, remains with those e-mail services that are bundled into existing mobile phone screens, said Enderle.

"The fact that Google has been signaling its entry into the cell phone business likely will make it more difficult for a cell phone provider to work with Google and give Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) and Microsoft a bit of an advantage," said Enderle.

Although providers such as Verizon are beginning to provide POP access to e-mail through smartphones, many users likely will remain loyal to Hotmail as it continues to appear on their mobile phone Web interface menus.

"Of course, when Google does do its own phone -- assuming it is successful -- this advantage could shift back," noted Enderle.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Kimberly Hill


More by Kimberly Hill

Apple's Remote: An App Near to My TV-Hungry Heart
February 05, 2009
If you think free iPhone apps are worth the price, think again -- especially if Apple is the developer. Remote is one freebie that you're going to want to use every time you turn on your TV. And keep using for hours, even if you don't make a single phone call or surf to a single Web site. There's a method to Apple's generosity: It hopes you'll never put your iPhone down.
Boxee Gives New Meaning to Plug and Play
February 04, 2009
If you're longing for media convergence but not yet sure you want to spend big bucks to make it happen in a still-shifting television landscape, Boxee might be just the app for you. MacNewsWorld reviewer Kimberly Hill, who's been testing the alpha release with her Mac, considers it a great way to wait until the dust settles.
The Plight of Advertisers in a Multichannel World
January 09, 2009
Consumers increasingly expect device independence in accessing content, indicates a new survey from Deloitte. The trend is most pronounced among younger people, but Baby Boomers and older adults -- those likely to be bigger spenders -- are also mixing it up. What's an advertiser to do?
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network