Windows Live Messenger (formerly named
MSN Messenger) is an instant messaging client created by Microsoft that is currently designed to work with Windows XP (up to Wave 3), Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows Mobile, Windows Phone, Windows CE, Xbox 360, Blackberry OS, iOS, Java ME, S60 on Symbian OS 9.x, and Zune HD.
The client has been part of Microsoft's Windows Live set of online services since 2005. It connects to Microsoft's Messenger service. The client was first released as MSN Messenger on July 22, 1999,
and as Windows Live Messenger on December 13, 2005.
In June 2009, Microsoft reported the service attracted over 330 million active users each month.
Features
There
are various games and applications available in Windows Live Messenger
that can be accessed via the conversation window by clicking on the
games icon, and challenging your friend or contact to a competition in a
game, or inviting them to launch a shared external application.
One can send messages to contacts who are offline; they will receive
the messages once they come online. Additionally, a user can start
conversations even when his or her status is set to
Appear Offline in Windows Live Messenger 2009 or before.
Social networks integration
Users can connect services such as Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn using Windows Live Profile,
and display their contact's Messenger social updates within the "Full
view" of Windows Live Messenger. Users can also post status updates and
photos directly to the connected services within Windows Live Messenger.
Additionally, Messenger also imports all contacts from the connected
services and integrates with Facebook Chat (via the XMPP protocol) for instant messaging support with users on Facebook.
- Appear offline to individuals or categories
Windows Live Messenger allow users to appear offline to particular
individual contacts, as well as to an entire category within Windows
Live Messenger, while appearing online to other contacts. This is a
recent feature of Windows Live Messenger 2011, and is a departure from
the previous versions of Windows Live Messenger, where blocking a
contact would prevent the "blockee" from sending the user any messages
to the "blocker". With the "appear offline to" configuration currently
implemented, "hidden from" users can still send "offline messages" to
the target.
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