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Computing

Microsoft Live Messenger hates my webcam and why Microsoft is the same old story

I tried using Microsoft Live Messenger, the heir to the MSN Messenger legacy. MSN Messenger was a serviceable option for people who did not have Skype. I tried using Live Messenger today with my mom who lives in Israel.

To my surprise, when I tried to connect and use my trusted Logitech Quickcam Pro webcam, which worked for the better of 3 years and does so faithfully with Skype day in and day out, I was told by Live Messenger that I did not have a webcam or audio devices. Welcome to 2009, but no audio? Guess what, it all still works with Skype and worse off, even with the long in the tooth Windows Messenger.

Looking at Yahoo! Answers for some direction, I found out that the accepted answer was, well, ‘there’s no answer and something is wrong’. Windows Live being Microsoft’s moniker for the startup way and the new spirit reinvigorating the giant software company, I went to the development team’s blog. Maybe I could post my issue there, at least as a comment. Sadly, Microsoft continues to disappoint. The comments a post about a new feature about ‘3D emoticons’ all talk about problems and issues with Live Messenger. Any responses? no. How many comments? Look at the image below. Why would I share my comment with them? Do they care?

live-comments

It is disheartening that new features, as crucial as 3D emoticons is, take precedence over the meat and potatoes of instant messaging, like audio and video chat. If Microsoft is looking to change, become more accessible, more like a startup or worse, like Google, they should LISTEN. The worst evidence of their deaf ears is the URL of the blog: “MessengerSays.spaces.live.com”. They say, we listen.

Microsoft needs a conversation. Not a monologue. They have the resources, to listen to people’s comments. We want their products to work and comments on a blog show the best example of them caring back about us. Until then, Messenger is uninstalled.

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Computing

Enabling Tags in Windows Live Writer for WordPress

I started using Windows Live Writer about 6 months ago as it was a surprisingly useful tool coming from the most surprising source, Microsoft. It actually worked, see. One feature that I was missing though, and made me stop using it was the fact that I could not get it to tag posts. I love tagging, well, I fell in love with tagging and I was willing to bear the awful editors WordPress provides in order to just do that, tag. So today I updated the version of Live Writer to the latest release candidate. Never mind the totally awful classic Microsoft uber uber bloatware (to download one update you end up with almost 200MB of unrelated crap) – the fail machine cannot change, can it? – and voila, I have the new Live Writer. And it still cannot tag the way WordPress does it. Its tagging is meant to correlate your posts to sites like Delicious and Technorati. Not what I wanted. Luckily I found this awesome tool that turns on a setting in Live Writer to do that. Run the downloadable program, restart Live Writer and press F2 to show an additional form, that includes tags for your own blog. Yay!

This is how it looks in the end. Yay useful. Thanks Microsoft!

tags-enabled

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Computing

Hey Microsoft: Outlook Web Access does not work that well with IE 8

An add on to my angry post about Internet Explorer 8; having accessed my company’s Outlook Web Access application – the webmail side of the Exchange server we use (Exchange 2003), I was unable to forward an email using IE 8.

Google at least claims to have Chrome tested before unleashing it unto the world. Microsoft apparently does not even test its own products. Trashing mercilessly. I know.

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