If you ended up searching for yet another way to aggregate your social activity from your across the net, then you’re in luck. Windows Live, the MobileMe for PCs, is getting into the hyper-aggregation business with a variety of social websites.
Today’s Windows Live announcement means that users will now be able to connect their social network exercise from 20 new partners including Facebook, Digg, and SmugMug. The end result is a Windows Live, “What’s New” activity feed filled with information about what your friends are doing from across the world wide web.
In total,
office professional plus 2007 sale, Microsoft’s social aggregation offering now includes 30 sites and services for pulling and pushing content. The list includes a myriad of hot social sites and blog platforms like Facebook, Twitter,
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Office 2010 Professional Product Key, Photobucket, Digg, and SmugMug. Plus, three of the new supported services — MySpace, hi5, Tagged — allow users to connect their contact lists between those sites and Windows Live.
Adding new services can be accomplished by visiting your profile page,
Office 2010 Key, selecting the appropriate services, and adding respective site credentials. You can also add all the activities you’d like to share, and specify with whom. Privacy options are based on activity, and allow for items to be shared with everyone, shared with your network, or shared with select individuals. Because new activity appears across Windows Live products (like Hotmail), you’ll want to carefully select which audiences can see which activities.
Even though Windows is obviously emulating aggregation services like FriendFeed, and even Facebook’s real-time news feed, the end result is a big win for Windows Live users who are actively using the service’s other products,
Cheap Office Standard 2007, which include Hotmail, Messenger, and People (contacts). Aggregation with real network context is starting to be a popular trend,
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