Windows Live Messenger 2009 was originally designated version
9.0, it was later assigned the technical version number 14.0, in
order to be unified with the other Windows Live programs and
Microsoft Office programs.
In a presentation to the Georgia Institute of Technology's
IEEE Student Branch, Microsoft employee Andrew Jenks reported
that the Messenger team had been working on multi-person
audio/video chat, and they are also attempting to create
interoperability with AIM/XMPP/ICQ. There is a basic internal
version that works with XMPP already.However, these
features were not seen in any of the beta versions of Windows
Live Messenger 2009 as of Milestone 3.
Microsoft sent an invitation to participate in the Windows
Live Messenger "9" beta program to Microsoft Connect members on
November 20, 2007; a week later, Microsoft began sending out
emails welcoming them to the Windows Live Messenger "9" beta
program for the first release, known as Beta 0.
A fan site for Windows Live Messenger, Mess.be, claimed to
have a new build of Windows Live Messenger "9" on August 11,
2008, and published screenshots along with a brief summary of
new features. The screenshots featured a new user interface
design matching the "Wave 3" design in development by Microsoft.
The images were later removed by the site after a DMCA notice
was received. The installer for the same build was leaked
through private forums on August 23, 2008. It would later be
discovered this build was a preview of Milestone 2, or M2.
News web site LiveSide published an article on September 4,
2008, with screenshots of M2 of the newly minted "Windows Live
Messenger 2009," which had become version 14.0 instead of 9.0 as
previously expected. LiveSide summarized its new features,
including protection against messaging spam, the ability to stay
signed into the application from several computers (referred to
as "Multiple Points of Presence Support"), animated GIF files in
the photo area, per-contact customized sounds for various user
actions, and clickable URLs in the status area.
Microsoft began the official beta program for Windows Live
Messenger 2009 on September 17, 2008, when it released a new
beta officially known as Windows Live Messenger 2009 Beta
(Milestone 3, Build 14.0.5027.908), which was made available to
the general public as a free download. The ability to submit
feedback, however, was restricted to select participants of the
Microsoft Connect closed beta program.
Notable changes in Milestone 3 include a new revamped and
refined user interface to follow suit with the rest of the
Windows Live "Wave 3" design, the ability to set a "Scene" by
customizing the background image and color of the contact list,
and the display of these scenes in conversation windows for
improved contact identification and window management.
Milestone 3 also brings a new "Groups" feature that allows
users to create a continuous group conversation between select
contacts, newly redesigned status icons which now resemble small
gems rather than the previous "Messenger Buddy" icons, a new
default "Favorites" category in which you can place your
favorite contacts for easy access to them, a new Photo Sharing
utility that allows contacts to quickly and easily browse photos
together, and a "What's New" section at the bottom of the
contact list to outline recent contact updates. Display pictures
have been moved over to the left side of conversation windows,
and new colorful borders appear around display pictures to
display the current status of that contact. Milestone 3 is the
first version of Windows Live Messenger to use the standard
window frame on Windows Vista in accordance with the user
experience guidelines.
Several features were removed in version 9.0 however, such as
the ability to use add-ins, the ability to transfer files when
the recipient is signed in as offline, the "Be right back," "Out
to lunch," and "In a call" status options, the Go to my space
button, the ability to adjust webcam settings during a video
call, the Send button, some games (depending on your
localization) and integration with Windows Contacts. Other
features were replaced, such as Sharing Folders (replaced by
integration with Windows Live SkyDrive) and background sharing
(replaced by the "Scene" feature).
On December 15, 2008, Windows Live Messenger 2009 RC (Build
14.0.8050.1202) was released together with the other Windows
Live Wave 3 software applications, now renamed as Windows Live
Essentials. This version saw a removal of the custom sign-in
sound feature however it is still possible to select a sound for
other individuals, as well as changes to how the background
image chosen is applied to the conversation windows. This build
also included over 200 bug fixes including the "Custom Emoticon
Bug" and saving of pictures when using the Photo sharing
feature. On January 7, 2009, the same build was released as the
final version of Windows Live Messenger 2009.
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