Oh, AOL. The Internet giant, in mid-turnaround under CEO Tim Armstrong, can&'t help but seem a bit bumbly still.
Take, for example, its announcementあthat it had recently revamped its AOL Mail system as part of an overall makeover of the companya4ぎa4г products. It might have seen like a thunder-stealing move to unveil the new AOL Mail on Sunday, amid heavy buzz about a planned Facebook announcement Monday &8212' had Facebook not revealed a messaging service that extends far beyond email.
The full AOL product will be released early next year, but interested users can sign up to request an invitation to the beta version today, said the company.
Dubbed Project Phoenix, the new AOL Mail has helped itself to some of Gmaila4ぎa4г more popular features&8211'it lets you a4ぎAstara4ぎ messages or rank them by importance, as well as providing a simple, easy-to-read navigation bar at the top.あIt has a streamlined look that is a far cry from its traditionally busy design, with the aforementioned Quick Bar at the top of the page letting AOLa4ぎa4г users create texts, emails and instant messages quickly and easily.
It also now allows users to aggregate all their email in one place, linking all of a usersa4ぎa4 other email addresses to their AOL account. Most importantly, perhaps, it has ways for users to shed their aol.com addresses for newer, perhaps less square, ones, such as wow.com, games.com, ygm.com and love.com.
A Smart View sidebar lets them keep content like photos or attachments in unopened messages, even if theya4ぎa4ёe given them a quick glance to see what they contain, while you can now have several messages up and open at once without overshadowing the inbox.
In addition to keeping it competitive with faster, more nimble competitors like Google and Facebook, revamping their mail feature is crucial to the companya4ぎa4г bottom line: AOL said in a statement that AOL Mail still accounts for as much as 45 percent of the pageviews on the network.
&''Email remains one of the most vital communication tools despite all of the new sites and apps available to consumers today,&'' said Brad Garlinghouse, president of AOL&'s Consumer Applications Group. &''There is still so much innovation to be done in the space and Project Phoenix is just the beginning.&''
Still, despite AOL&'s enthusiasm about the project, it is clear that the changes made through the hopefully named Phoenix are largely predictable, cosmetic and long overdue.
The new features also showed very little of the inventiveness and agility displayed today by its younger, far hipper rival Facebook &8212' proving AOL obviously has a long way to go before it can convince an increasingly sophisticated user base that it isn&'t your mother&'s dial-up web connection anymore.
Next Story: E-recruiter RealMatch scores $4.7M in funding and a Monster CEO Previous Story: Google chief says web-connected TVs will lead to fountain of new revenue sources
Print Email Twitter Facebook Google Buzz LinkedIn Digg StumbleUpon Reddit Delicious Google More&8230'
Companies: aol, Facebook
People: Brad Garlinghouse, Tim Armstrong
Companies: aol, Facebook
People: Brad Garlinghouse, Tim Armstrong
Riley McDermid is a contributing reporter to VentureBeat. She was previously the online editor at institutional investing and trading forum Markets Media, which she joined in 2008 from Dow Jones/MarketWatch in New York. Her work has appeared in the The New York Times, the Associated Press, Portfolio Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, and Barrona4ぎa4г. She has won awards from the American Society of Business Publishers and Editors, the Magazine Association of the Southeast, the Mississippi Press Association and the Atlanta Press Club, and was a finalist for the Pacemaker Prize for excellence in news reporting.
VentureBeat has new weekly email newsletters. Stay on top of the news, and don't miss a beat.
Comments