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Microsoft Looks At Integrating Forums and E-mail

prostoalex writes "Scott Hanselman shares a document from Microsoft Research internal Web site on Gina Venolia's latest research in user interface design. Since half of the e-mail conversations require reply and then further replies, the model is not too different from current Web forums. Future Outlook versions might integrate the nested interface for e-mail conversations." Gotta say, that'd be pretty nice to have.

50 of 462 comments (clear)

  1. Why has this taken so long? by ChaoticChaos · · Score: 4, Funny

    /. ran a story about this very thing from IBM's R&D who also came to the same conclusion.

    Honestly, it's hard to believe that it took PHD "rocket scientists" to come to the conclusion that email is probably better interfaced as a forum. We've all known that for years. It's also hard to understand why there aren't "big name" email clients that already support that kind of interface.

    Thinking of Microsoft's offering in this area, it would be nice if they automatically emailed the author of the worm that ravaged your system so you could conduct a forum-interfaced conversation with the person. Kinda like an auto-Friendster between worm-authors and worm-targets. ;-)

    1. Re:Why has this taken so long? by Kaa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      it hasn't. we used to call it "usenet".

      Nah, not even close. Usenet is a free-for-all public discussion. Email exchange is an invitation-only private discussion. Big difference.

      --

      Kaa
      Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
    2. Re:Why has this taken so long? by CoolVibe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I dunno, but where I come from, we call that a 'mailing list'.

    3. Re:Why has this taken so long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Thank you! Finally, someone clarified the issue. It's amazing how many people are waving the Usenet flag around in this thread and that is an apples and oranges comparison.

      The distinction is less clear if you use a mail-reader/news-reader like Gnus. It threads both and allows references to/from each. I have mailing list topics that are threaded in Gnus and they work just like a newsgroup. Sometimes someone responds to a newsgroup post directly to me, I can use the "get-parent" operation and Gnus will fetch the newsgroup post they responded to.

    4. Re:Why has this taken so long? by hamanu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually it is STILL just usenet.

      You see, you CAN have PRIVATE news servers with PRIVATE newsgroups using exsisting usenet technology. You just have to not specify any news peers, and require login/passwords.

      I did this years ago.

      --
      every _exit() is the same, but every clone() is different.
    5. Re:Why has this taken so long? by Bazzargh · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm not sure if MS aren't talking about something different from what most of this discussion thinks they are. Rather than showing the thread of discussion of whole emails (which we're all used to in other clients) it might be they mean something more like this old discussion of what e-mail discussions should look like by Ka Ping-Yee..

      In case you manage to /. that, the idea is that it shows the responses to pieces of your email - the kind where someone says "see my responses inline" and responds to each of your points piecemeal, then you do the same to their responses, and so on.

      I've often thought it would be cool to write something to parse emails the KPY way, but the heuristics would have to be pretty damn clever to deal with supercite. Specifically what I wanted was something that combined KPY's ideas with text-autosummarization , and some 'author ranking' information to produce mailing list summaries from gmane which are like Kernel Traffic and Cousins, or the now-defunct Eclectic.

      Oh well, I can always wait until MS put this in Outlook 2010 ;)

    6. Re:Why has this taken so long? by JimDabell · · Score: 4, Informative

      Usenet is a free-for-all public discussion. Email exchange is an invitation-only private discussion. Big difference.

      Not really. It's trivial to set up a private NNTP server. Okay, you can't call private NNTP servers "Usenet", but it's the exact same software.

    7. Re:Why has this taken so long? by thing12 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually it is STILL just usenet.

      You see, you CAN have PRIVATE news servers with PRIVATE newsgroups using exsisting usenet technology. You just have to not specify any news peers, and require login/passwords.

      No, really it isn't. This concept is that of a discussion that can evolve from a simple email exchange between a small group, to one that grows and grows as more people are invited in. Unless you can automatically and transparently convert an email thread into a private newsgroup - and then only allow admittance to those who are specifically invited by sending them a message (maybe with some sort of key) - then Usenet doesn't accomodate this at all. Sure, having a "department only" usenet group, or server is a handy thing. But it's ad-hoc discussions between a very small subset of people that you're ignoring. Easilly adding people to a discussion who are not necessarily privvy everything else a group discusses is exactly what email gives you and usenet doesn't.

    8. Re:Why has this taken so long? by QNX · · Score: 5, Funny
      Nah, not even close. Usenet is a free-for-all public discussion. Email exchange is an invitation-only private discussion. Big difference

      Nah, not even close. Email exchange is a free-for-all spam me public discussion. Big difference.

      --
      Karma: Very Very Very Very Bad
    9. Re:Why has this taken so long? by JawFunk · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Thinking of Microsoft's offering in this area

      Actually, I'd like to see someone other than MS devise a popular interface like this first, such as an open source developer. If such a release was Outlook compatible and Linux compatible (of course) and gain some ground in the business world, it would be less likely that MS will devise their new email interface and require new costly per user licensing, instead of simply offering it as an upgrade.

      --
      [Please sign here]
  2. Uhm... by metrazol · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Great, we're going backwards... this is USENET, isn't it? I love that people first complain that new technology doesn't do what they want, but rejoice when new technology does what the old technology did, just at four times the cost. Really people, can we invent something new for once?

    --
    "Life's funny sometimes." "And sometimes it isn't." --Cat's Cradle
    1. Re:Uhm... by Albanach · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It's interesting that Outlook forces you to use Outlook Express as a usenet client, rather than having the functionality built in. This is fairly typical Microsoft practise when they want to be able to sell you something, yet still say the functionality via open standards is available.

      For example, in Outlook there are frequent problems when using lots of IMAP folders. To share calendars etc, you need to use POP3. Microsoft, however, can sell you exchange server to replace your IMAP folders and allow you to share calendars.

      If Outlook had built in NNTP support, every office would have a local NNTP server doing this. Instead, they'll add a new feature to Outlook that will only be available if you're running it with MS Exchange. Big bucks.

    2. Re:Uhm... by bigberk · · Score: 4, Funny

      X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook IMO, Build 9.0.2416 (9.0.2910.0)

      <html>
      what is an useenet? could u pleaze email me your answer i dont read answers here
      </html>

      >It will be "innovation" if this new
      >USENET, err I meant Mail Forums, will
      >eliminate the top posting bastards that
      >usually have an OUTLOOK mailer
      >header...

  3. This way... by Lane.exe · · Score: 5, Funny
    You can pinpoint exactly where in the conversation the worm came in!

    It's all about trusted computing, people.

    --
    IAALS.
  4. If I understand this correctly... by l-ascorbic · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...Apple Mail has done this since Panther came out. Emails can be viewed as threaded discussions. It's clever, and doesn't just go on subject line, but also pays attention to in-reply-to headers (or whatever it's really called).

    1. Re:If I understand this correctly... by PotPieMan · · Score: 5, Informative

      Mutt has done this for as long as I can remember.

    2. Re:If I understand this correctly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Indeed, the latest Mac mail has a "fancy threads" feature: http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/mail/

    3. Re:If I understand this correctly... by SkArcher · · Score: 5, Informative

      Operas inbuilt E-mail client, M2, also already does this, integrating it with the usenet reader as well.

      Opera can be set to a variety of preferences for how it makes threads, depending on reply-to's, users recieve, subject lines and matched text in the mail body.

      This is not a new idea, it is just new to MS users.

      --

      An infinite number of monkeys will eventually come up with the complete works of /.
    4. Re:If I understand this correctly... by SkArcher · · Score: 4, Informative

      Opera is, overall, one of the finest pieces of desktop software available. In-built mouse gestures, total and obedient customisation, the life saving 'resume where you were before Windows crashed' feature, M2 for e-mail and news, a download agent and it does desktop memos for office use.

      And thats to say nothing of the pure speed and power of the thing. Faster than any other web-browser than I have ever used.

      This post crafted using Opera

      --

      An infinite number of monkeys will eventually come up with the complete works of /.
  5. Mozilla Has this by nachoman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mozilla already has this. You can set your email to threaded view and it looks just like it does when viewing a newsgroup. Newsgroups are really email meets forums. Forums just seem to be gaining more ground today instead of newsgroups.

    There is nothing new here. Move along people, nothing to see.

    1. Re:Mozilla Has this by DukeyToo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think that threaded email is only half of the solution. Some of my conversations use email, some Usenet, some use instant messaging software, some use issue tracking software, some use phone calls, and the rest are person-person.

      Threaded emails is nice, but really it would be great if I had threaded multi-provider tracking of conversations. So, if a IM conversation leads to an email + a phone call, it would be great if that could all be captured in a threaded view.

      Its all technically feasible, except for (perhaps) the person-person chats.

      --
      Most writers regard truth as their most valuable possession, and therefore are most economical in its use - Mark Twain
    2. Re:Mozilla Has this by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What Mozilla doesn't have is a way to intergrate your responses into the message tree in your inbox. Sure, you can display stuff threaded, but it doesn't look like a conversation because it leaves out your input. I take it the proposed Outlook implementation would be different.

  6. yay by pardasaniman · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now we can spend minutes loading chain emails with 1mb activex controls, and several viruses all at once.

    Microsoft: Where will u be able to go today?
    Apple: Where will u go while we distract you with random graphics?
    Linux: How will u go where you want today?

    1. Re:yay by Dalcius · · Score: 5, Funny

      Not mine, but a goodie:

      Microsoft: Where do you want to go today?
      Apple: Where do you want to go tomorrow?
      Linux: Are you guys coming or what?!

      --
      ~Dalcius
      Rome wasn't burnt in a day.
    2. Re:yay by TotallyUseless · · Score: 5, Funny

      Microsoft: Let's go in my Honda today.
      Apple: Let's go in my BMW.
      Linux: Hey guy's! I built my own car!

      --

      Time for some tasty Shiner Bock!
  7. More Innovation! by Elladan · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wow, next thing you know, they'll be inventing the command line!

    I mean, just imagine... You could control a computer just by typing in text, almost like language! None of those bizarre manhandling a carpal tunnel creating mouse all day to point at primitive representations on the screen!

    Er, oh wait. They are.

    Why is it that whenever Microsoft "invents" something that everyone else has had for decades, it's "big news" and "innovation" ?

  8. Bah, set your priorities! by bazik · · Score: 3, Interesting

    >Future Outlook versions might integrate
    >the nested interface for e-mail conversations

    They should better work on a noob-proof attachment handling and add a dozen of messageboxes when the luser double-clicks the attachment... 'Are really you sure you want to open nudeteens.jpg.exe?'

    If they'd at least integrate a virus scanner... they did buy a AV company, why dont they use their knowledge?

    Not that I use Windows or Outlook, but I am annoyed about the ~100 viruses I get every day... *sigh*

    --


    --
    One by one the penguins steal my sanity...
  9. New feature? Hah. by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This sounds a lot like sorting a folder by thread (in-reply-to/references, time, subject). Is there any non-MS e-mail program out there that doesn't allow for that? Pine does, Mutt does, Evolution does, Mozilla/Thunderbird does... does MS really need an R&D department to tell them that a 20-year-old standard feature would be useful?

  10. Re:I can't believe I'm saying this, but... by derF024 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just use a Mac. Their email client pretty much does this already.

    Or use mozilla, or evolution, or kmail, or squirrelmail, or mutt, or any of the other email clients that already do this and have gotten the concept right. Apple's mail.app doesn't actually show you a nested discussion, it just groups messages by threads.

    Welcome to 1997 email concepts Microsoft, we were all wondering when you'd get there.

  11. its nested view, not threaded view by kervel · · Score: 3, Informative

    i think they mean the same layout as ./ comments when you set view to 'nested' (not 'threaded')

  12. Re:What are the chances.... by SoTuA · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...that this excellent idea (although I believe it has been bandied about before) will still be shot down by the /. crowd for no reason other than it is from MS?

    No, it will be shot down because it has already been done (in Mozilla and Apple's Mail.app, for example, not to mention usenet).

    I have no problems with MS software. I have problems with MS claiming this is innovation, when it is playing catch-up. (like pop-up supression and tabbed browsing coming in XP SP2)

  13. Re:Outlook already does this by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not really. Outlook and other mail clients look at the mail header to define a conversation. This is intended to do a better job than that: it looks at the content of the mail as well and tries to infer the threading structure from that.

  14. Good... or bad by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Informative

    This could be useful, but it would really depend on how well it's designed (which is a big red flag, given that we're talking about Microsoft). You'd certainly need some way to disable it.

    I work at a university, and I've got a few professors who use their inbox as their address book. So whenever they write to me, the message invariably has the same subject line - usually from a project that ended one, two, or more years ago! They pick that one because that's the first message from me they find in their inbox. I would imagine in this circumstance every mail I've ever gotten from the particular individuals would be concatenated into one long discussion - even though very little or none of it would be cogent to the current message or messages.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  15. Oooh! by Greyfox · · Score: 4, Funny
    After millions of dollars of research, Microsoft "innovates" the web-cached listserve that's been around for years. I bet they patent it, too.

    To give them credit though, their interface draws lines between the messages for the thread, which none of the primative web-cached listserves do. Obviously this advance in user-friendliness justifies the research dollars put into the effort.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  16. Outlook Forum by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 5, Funny

    Automatic "Standard reply" button included with the following options:

    • AOL reply: "me too!!!" with random capital letters.
    • Goth angst reply: 4 page poem describing death, decay and entropy on a personal level. Ends with "me too!!!" with random capital letters.
    • Teen angst reply: 4 page essay on how best friend's sister-in-law got pregnant from a 66 year old bum, End with "me too!!!" with random capital letters.
    • MS developer reply: 40 page EULA which basically means MS owns your house, car, soul and first born, ends with "me too!!!" with random capital letters.
    • Overclocker reply: 20 page essay on why your Outlook is faster because you changed the default desktop theme. Ends with "me too!!!" with random capital letters.
    • Script kiddie reply: Automagically hacks all Outlook apps on other computers using the forum, displays "me too!!!" with random capital letters in an endless popup loop.
    • Linux/Mac user reply: Formats HD, overheats CPU and lists you with the dept of HS as potential communistic terrorist involved with drug cartels. Automaticallly posts a flame claiming Linux is a travestite and RMS's beard is made out of pubic hair.
  17. IBM Remail project covers same ground... by glawrie · · Score: 5, Informative

    An earlier Slashdot article ( Remail: IBM is Reinventing Email ) from December 9th 2003 discusses similar work done by IBM researcher's on an advanced email system. It too aims to put the 'user' at the heart of email processing, and has identified clever iconic images with dots and lines as a way to help navigate discussion threads. But IBM's project seems to be more expansive than the work reported here, covering more aspects of how we interact with email.

  18. You can do this in Outlook 2000 by Montag2k · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've set up my Outlook 2000 to do this. All you need to do is go to the Tools menu, mouse over Current View, and change the option to "By Conversation Topic". You can also add buttons to automatically "Expand all" or "Collapse all" conversations. Its very handy - as soon as a new e-mail comes in, the entire conversation moves to the top of your inbox and you can re-read the history.

    Montag

  19. No it's different by pavon · · Score: 5, Informative

    Come on guys. I know reading the article is too much to ask for but could you at least look at the pretty picture. Apple Mail, Mozilla, mutt, pine all have a feature that let you sort the message listing in a usenet-style nested format. This is very different from displaying the contents of the messages themselves in a nested slashdot-style format. AFAIK, these other programs do not have this feature.

    1. Re:No it's different by CTho9305 · · Score: 5, Informative

      See page 6 of this pdf for what the article refers to... This is what Moz does.

  20. Re:Outlook already does this by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No, it isn't just silly.

    If you've ever been in a long multi-person thread, you know that writers will sometimes respond to more than one message in a single response. More than that, they're change the subject when the subject of their particular message is different from the rest of the conversation. This makes their e-mails more effective at communicating with the other people involved.

    More than that, this research has applications to recognizing the relationship among different mails in my inbox without being limited to the things which a computer can recognize with simple pattern matching. That's useful: searching my mail store is a huge chore unless I know exactly what I'm looking for. Unfortunately, I need to search precisely when I only remember the general outlines of a conversation.

  21. Once again... by stubear · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...Slashbots worldwide demonstrate their ignorance and blind devotion to the grand pumbah, errr, penguin and fail to understand what this new interface is all about. Let me first state that this is not simply e-mail threading like that in many other applications, even including Outlook since at least Outlook 97, maybe even sooner but this was the first version I began using as my sole e-mail app (in Outlook: click the 'group by box' and 'field chooser' in the advanced toolbar menu and select the appropriate fields to sort e-mail by. Tres cool.) Go re-read the "Conversation Clues" section of the article for a bit more info. Here's a relevant snippet for those who can't be bothered to RTFA though:

    It doesn't stop here. Venolia has also designed the user interface to give you some metrics about your conversations - you can find out at-a-glance just who you communicate with the most, and whether you are the originator, recipient or a participant. You can also see a complete list of the attachments, URLS, and images that are found in all your messages, in case you don't want to hunt through past e-mails to find that one document or Web site reference that you want.


    Innovation does not necessarily mean invention. Sometimes innovation is merely making something that already exists work better or more accessible. Gina's UI research has definitely developed somethign innovative in the field of e-mail UI design.
  22. Oh, you mean not top-posting? by Nucleon500 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Seriously - this problem was solved long ago in newsgroups (and on Slashdot). Instead of top-posting, quote the relevant material and write below it. Before Outlook Express became the de-facto email/news client, there was no problem. Then OE ruined that custom, and now they want it back. It's a simple change - fix the horrible line-wrapping for replies to text emails, and make the cursor show up on the bottom for replies.

    Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
    > Why is top-posting a bad thing?
    >> Top-posting.
    >>> What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in email?
  23. Moderation & Controls by chadjg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ithink that the "invitation only" part of this might be a bit deceptive. How do you ignore somebody that works a couple of cubes down? God knows you have to ignore most people in chat rooms and nearly all of them on usenet.

    Maybe if Microsoft built a user adjustable moderation system, with some meta-supervision built in it would be easier to gracefully ignore the office yahoo. Something tells me that they may have to spend a couple of bucks for a license to this, I think I've seen it before.

    Some kind of control is essential, I think. I half remember a .sig somewhere about usenet being in aspect and product like a panicked herd of circus elephants.

    I think this could be great, but I hope they think about it before they do it. Having most of the world's emailers with acess to a slashdot would be a freaking disaster.

    --
    Why do I have this? I don't smoke.
  24. As I suspected... by potcrackpot · · Score: 5, Informative

    99.9% of the comments so far have been critical. I find this pathetic.

    Would everyone please read and digest the article. This is NOT simply sorting by conversation topic, which a number of people are suggesting (Mozilla already does this, yadda, yadda yadda).

    To the goon who suggested that outlook 2000 already does what the article is talking about - it doesn't! Sorting "by Conversation Topic" is basically just a threaded view, sorted by subject.

    What the article is talking about is separating the conversations from the emails, and displaying them in a time ordered, colour-coded fashion. So, if an email thread splits into two separate conversations, this will be visible in the UI. Sorting by subject will not achieve this.

    I'm not suggesting by the way, that this is a new idea; I'm simply explaining what the article is about to those of you (most of the posters) who can't be fucked to read the article.

    I expect to be modded down for suggesting that people get a clue, and for suggesting that MS have had an idea which isn't bad.

    1. Re:As I suspected... by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Problem: doing this requires first solving the natural-language parsing problem. We're on our third generation of linguistics PhDs who can't find a solution to that problem, I don't think one researcher at MS has managed it, and without that breakthrough we're left with a simple threaded view again.

  25. And in a further show of innovation... by ttfkam · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft invents Kuro5hin!!!

    Witness the consistent interface. Marvel at the dynamic threading. Be wowed by the stimulus to content generation.

    Boy howdy, I am sure glad Microsoft is innovating here. I mean right now I could access news and discussions from any computer with a web browser. Now that Microsoft has laid its innovating hand on the problem, I'll only be able to get this from my MS Windows box. Thank heaven for Microsoft because I really enjoy having to set up my email account settings on my friends' computers.

    I mean if it weren't for this "thinking out of the box" idea, communication might actually take a step forward. Whew! That was close! No one wants that.

    --

    - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
  26. WikiMail by tauzell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'd like to see some sort of Wiki integration with email. It would allow me to edit the message. After saving the changes could go to all the recipients and original sender and they could see the updated version.

  27. Re:Amazing...WOW by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Hmm...my little simple text email client, "Mutt", has been doing the threading of my emails for years now.

    If MS really wanted to impress me with an upgrade to Outlook, they'd take out the damned HTML mail capabilities. I've seen 3 line emails from people come at me, that were so overbloated with background images, fonts and other crap that is not only unnecessary, but, actually distracting from the message they tried to convey...

    I like threaded messages, been working well for awhile, but, do it in plain text like it was meant to be..

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  28. shocking, given what they just did to hotmail by avi33 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's remarkable what they just did to make hotmail unusable:

    1. You can no longer open your messages in another window, (to have them load in the background).
    2. Once you open a message, you have to read the remaining ones in order.
    3. Once you reply, you need to advance through a confirmation screen, then click to get back to the main menu, where you have to start this nonsense all over again.

    All because they now force you to use javascript to view a message, in effect taking away certain web features (the ability to spawn multiple windows, load in the background) and turned it into a single-interface client...one that inherently takes SEVERAL SECONDS to get from one screen to another. I realize that some of this is to drive more ad views, but they've done this sort of thing before without doubling or tripling the effort required to read mail.

    hm, limiting functionality, slower response times? Sound like par-for-the-course MS improvements to me.

    It's finally enough to make me kill that address, which is annoying since I've had it since before the MS 'occupation.'

  29. Emacs/GNUS did it 10 years ago by Baki · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have been reading mailing lists for 10 years using GNUS, the usenet client for emacs. GNUS has many other "backends", not only nntp/usenet. You can really read mailing lists as if they were newsgroups. You can configure your "post" to just send the message to the list server, and your usenet kill files (and score files) are applied to these "groups" just like elsewhere.

    GNUS can even read your inbox and split your mails into different "groups"/lists based on criteria you configure, you don't need procmail for that.

    And it has a slashdot backend, to convert slashdot into a newsgroup :) (but I'm not using it at the moment).