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Microsoft is set to give its MSN portal a major upgrade, freshening up the popular destination with a new look and with social networking hooks such as integrated Facebook and Twitter feeds. This is no minor change, but a bold departure from MSN's previous presentation. Microsoft says that the main purposes of the update are to declutter the MSN homepage and to refresh its outdated look.
Though the update is not live today, Microsoft is giving the public a sneak peek at the redesigned beta MSN site here. MSN representatives say that the refreshed homepage will go live early next year and is the first step in a systematic process by the site to update the entire MSN network. (PC World is a content partner with MSN.)
The first thing you'll notice when viewing the beta MSN homepage is that the trademark blue background is gone, replaced by a white background. Also absent are the current homepage's copious blue links to Microsoft-owned destinations focusing on everything from Autos to Real Estate/Rentals to Horoscopes to TV. MSN is opting for a sleeker look with a horizontal navigation bar containing drop-down menus that cover the topics of News, Finance, Entertainment, Sports, and Lifestyle. (To compare the current MSN homepage to beta MSN's homepage, click the image labeled "msn vs. msn" above.)
Hands On With Beta MSN
I've been playing around with the beta MSN. Here are some highlights.
• Social networks Facebook, Twitter, and Microsoft's own Windows Live are integrated into the lower right-hand side of the homepage. The additions are welcome, as they allow people to browse feeds and update status without having to visit Facebook, for example.
• MSN is making an effort to offer localized content with Local Editions, which serves up local headlines and links to stories hosted on MSN partner site MSNBC. Local Edition also offers content you'd expect: weather forecasts, event listings, local sport scores, and traffic updates. Here is where MSN is leveraging its integration with Microsoft's Bing search engine. Local content, thanks to Bing, gets culled together instantly. Click "Local Restaurants" and Bing assembles a list of suitable places to eat, complete with reviews, directions, and star ratings.
• Video is a bigger part of the revamped MSN, with content now featured more prominently on the homepage and on other MSN pages such as Local Edition. MSN says that it will offer video from a deeper catalog of 300 sources, including Hulu, National Geographic, and Fox Entertainment Group.
My major beef with the beta MSN site is that its design and navigation clash with the design and navigation offered at other Microsoft-owned sites linked to via MSN. Click a news headline within beta MSN, and the software whisks you off to the MSNBC site, which has a very different Web design and navigation system. The dramatically different look and feel of the various destinations make surfing beta MSN a disjointed experience.
Microsoft says that what I experienced will eventually go away. Over time, MSN's featured News, Finance, Entertainment, Sports, and Lifestyle destinations will acquire a common interface.
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