More than 1 million people are now using the new Outlook.com, Hotmail's
successor, after Microsoft tweets the service's statistics after just
six hours.
Outlook.com has seen more than 1 million people sign up for the service in just a few hours, Microsoft has said.
The sign-up figures for the successor to Hotmail were tweeted by @Outlook yesterday just over six hours after the new service was first announced.
The changes include the new email address -- @outlook.com -- which
will replace the older @hotmail.com address, used by hundreds of
millions worldwide across its more than 10 years of its service. Users
can already "Upgrade to Outlook.com" to keep their existing address.
The new Web-based email service will eventually integrate Skype, delivering a new rival to Gmail-embedded Google's Talk service. Microsoft acquired Skype for $8.5 billion last year following European regulators signing off on the deal.
But the real measure of success will be if existing Hotmail users voluntarily make the jump to Outlook.com of their own accord: the software giant still has to hope it can generate enough buzz around the new service to prevent a mass exodus to rival services, such as Google's Gmail.
Google remains in the lead with 425 million users, while Hotmail has approximately more than 350 million at the last count.
Outlook.com has seen more than 1 million people sign up for the service in just a few hours, Microsoft has said.
The sign-up figures for the successor to Hotmail were tweeted by @Outlook yesterday just over six hours after the new service was first announced.

Microsoft's figures on Outlook.com signups
The new Web-based email service will eventually integrate Skype, delivering a new rival to Gmail-embedded Google's Talk service. Microsoft acquired Skype for $8.5 billion last year following European regulators signing off on the deal.
But the real measure of success will be if existing Hotmail users voluntarily make the jump to Outlook.com of their own accord: the software giant still has to hope it can generate enough buzz around the new service to prevent a mass exodus to rival services, such as Google's Gmail.
Google remains in the lead with 425 million users, while Hotmail has approximately more than 350 million at the last count.
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