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Torres Talking

Windows Live Blogger: Mike Torres

My new blog: Refocuser

If you want to skip my rambling and just check out my new blog, here it is: http://www.refocuser.com.  Refocuser is a blog about focus; specifically the ability to apply your focus at will to whatever requires your attention.

Refocuser

Hi folks!  Since December of 2004 I’ve been blogging here on Torres Talking – sometimes regularly and sometimes irregularly :)  Topics on this blog have ranged quite a bit from “what I’ve been up to” type posts to detailed descriptions of the ways I’ve applied various technologies in my life.  Torres Talking was a real passion of mine for a number of years and has been very instrumental in crystallizing my thoughts and helping prove to myself that I actually have something to contribute to the overall “conversation”.  It’s also how I became a published author, has served as motivation for my part in revamping Microsoft’s social networking strategy… and most importantly is how I’ve come to connect with hundreds of new and interesting people (both virtually and in the real world).  For all these things, I’ll always be grateful.

But all good things come to an end.  As you probably already know, since the birth of my daughter and a shift in job responsibilities, I’ve had a hard time dedicating the kind of time and effort to this blog as I once did.  I feel like most of my posts recently have been apologetic and not at all informational, and every time I feel the urge to post something interesting about something on Techmeme, I tweet it instead.  The urge disappears and I move on.

Also, as a Microsoft employee and someone who loves his job, there’s inherent conflict in evaluating and talking about technology from a personal standpoint.  You run the risk of insulting internal Microsoft teams inadvertently and can be accused of being both a self-promoter (through genuine praise of our tools and products) or a liability (through equally genuine promotion of other tools and products).  It’s a bit of a no-win situation.  Either way you always strive to be honest, but all the while you’re doubting whether or not you should hit publish.  The cost/benefit ratio shifted at some point for me, so I’m going to focus most of my “tech writing” energy on Microsoft-run blogs like Windows Live Wire (I have a post coming soon there).

But I’ve also decided to start another blog.  Something I’ve been “threatening” to do for years (like… 10!) and finally decided to just go for it.

This time it’s a more structured blog to focus (no pun intended) on another lifelong passion of mine; personal growth and self-directed focus.  At times I dabbled in this area on Torres Talking, but this blog will go into much more depth on this broad topic.  The full title of the blog is Refocuser: Find flow, fight fear, and create focus!

You can learn more about Refocuser here: http://www.refocuser.com/about.  And if you’re interested in how I’ve found time to keep this blog up with everything else going on, I’ve already blogged about it!

Refocuser covers:

  • Goal setting
  • Flow
  • Fear management
  • Work/life balance
  • Conflict management
  • Productivity and yes, some ‘lifehacks’ occasionally
  • Nutrition and supplementation (fuel for focus!)
  • Exercise and activity
  • Philosophy
  • Positivity
  • Purpose
  • Sleep (it matters more than you think!)
  • Simplicity
  • Creativity

Browse through the site and start filling your own toolbox.  Email me with questions if you have any.  Or just sit-back, relax, and subscribe to updates via email, Twitter, or RSS.

Hopefully you’ll enjoy it!

Note: Torres Talking will stick around for some time, but I’ve turned off comments.  I may not post here again for a while (or ever!) but if you’re interested in focus, you can always find me at www.refocuser.com.  And for Microsoft-specific questions, comments, or concerns, just hit me up on Twitter.  We have some great stuff on the way – I’ve definitely never been prouder to be a Microsoft employee!

New Plan for Digital Books

A couple years ago (7/07) I wrote:

I think the digital book will be dramatically different from the 1999 eBook.  The hardware will be much more appealing to book worms - possibly with digital pages that actually flip - and the fonts and rendering technology will be wondrous.  The dedicated device will be connected to the net for instant download (via an iTunes-like store, probably provided by Amazon.com and B&N) of new books, magazines, newspapers, and other types of content.

Digital Books and the Trade-in Model

In other words, I had a vision of the Amazon Kindle – and as I typed this up, they were working on it (pretty cool).  I also wrote that I wanted to replace all existing paper books with digital books in the year 2012.  But I’m thinking of moving that up by a few years now that I have about 40 new books on shelves that I didn’t have back in 2007.  Books are starting to overwhelm our living space (just like CDs did for years) and it’s time for me to do something about it short of adding more square footage.  So here’s my plan:

  1. Remove all books from my public Amazon wishlist and move them to a private “Want to read” list.  Having received close to 20 books for Christmas this year, I think I need to get serious about this.  I’m walking distance to the Microsoft Library and can get books delivered to my office whenever I want them, so owning books is starting to feel a little silly.  Where it makes sense, I will replace the physical book with the Kindle version once that’s possible.
  2. As I read books I already own, I will take searchable notes (in OneNote) where applicable.  Not going to do that for Twilight or Tom Clancy of course, but I’ll definitely be doing it for psychology/business motivation/productivity books where things I want to remember are covered in detail.
  3. Once finished, I’ll add those books to another list, “Books I’ve read” just in case I want to refer back to them at some point (or just remind myself that I actually read them).  This will address the packrat need in me.
  4. Then, I’ll sell the book.  De-clutter.

If I ever need to refer back to the book for some reason, I’ll either get it delivered from the library, listen to the Audible version, or buy the cheaper Kindle copy.  This assumes two things:

  • I get a Kindle.  In order to go digital, I need a great reader.  I’m assuming that the new Kindle on February 9th will be one.  The DRM still bugs me but if over time enough people complain, they’ll have to do what Apple just did with iTunes and let people strip the DRM.
  • I can sell books without dealing with selling the books. I have a used book store around the corner from me, but the best value I’ll get from selling books will come from Amazon or another online retailer.  Except I really don’t want to deal with shipping books every day (or posting them to begin with).  So I need to find a cost-effective and efficient way to do this, possibly by hiring a virtual assistant.  Ideas are welcome.

And just for fun, I’m going to learn how to speed read finally so I can get through all of this a little quicker.  Most of the books I read are perfectly “speed readable”.  I’ve found some resources on this but I’ll spend some time over the next couple of days digging up some more.

So just like CDs and paper in our home, in a few years most books (with a few exceptions) will be replaced with digital versions or gone completely once I get the value extracted from them.

[Omar and I are giving a talk on Getting Things Done at Microsoft at TechReady next week.  The funny thing is that one of the benefits we tout of applying a system to your inbox and task list is that you start to systematize everything around you.  This is one odd example of me doing that!]

Blogging in 2009

Russell Beattie sums something up that I’ve been thinking for a while about personal blogging punditry in 2009:

Man, I wish I could just sit down and write like I used to on a daily basis.

It feels *different* though... Keeping a weblog seems to have become a sort of a mid 2000's fad that has passed its peak and starting to fade into obscurity, and maybe even soon ridicule along with bell-bottom jeans and mullets. Even though I love putting my thoughts out there, in the back of my mind it's almost embarrassing to add to the cacophony of opinions that now flow daily from every orifice of the Internet from people who just haven't gotten the message that it's just not cool any more. I mean, hey, let's face it - Social Networking elected the current US president, not blogging.

I can't seem to get into the habit... - RussellBeattie.com

I started blogging back in 2001/2002 on my own domain (with about 5 readers as I didn’t have “Microsoft” attached to my name) and continued to blog (this time as a fitness blogger) once I joined Microsoft.  In December 2004 I “reopened” my personal blog here on Spaces – Torres Talking – and for a few years I was rockin’ it, posting at least 5-8 times monthly with posts that took me time to research, think about, write, and comment on.  For a while I was in the Technorati 100 back when it mattered but given my lack of attention to this site since my daughter was born on Oct 07, I don’t even show up in a Live Search for “Mike Torres” anymore!

Oh well.

I’ve talked about this before, but there are lots of reasons for slowing down in addition to the embarrassment factor Russell calls out above.  For one, I spend 8-12 hours each day writing between email, product specifications, and vision memos… so the last thing I want to do in downtime is write more.  Secondly, time spent training (martial arts/strength training) cuts into already valuable time with my family and it’s frankly just more important to me than blogging.  And of course, downtime during early mornings, nights, and weekends are best spent with my wife and daughter.  The little one changes every single week and if I don’t spend enough time with her during any given week, I can feel her changing without me, and it’s one of the worst feelings in the world.

I think another real factor is that I contribute thoughts in other ways.  Twitter updates, SmugMug photos, Facebook comments, Google Reader shared items, and Windows Live to pull it all together for people… they all give me an outlet that takes seconds instead of hours, and anyone following that stream will immediately know where my head is without reading a bunch of prose.  Some examples of items from my Twitter feed which I would have blogged about back in 2006:

  • Omar & I are giving a talk at TechReady next week, "Getting Things Done like a Ninja at Microsoft" - 350+ people projected, yikes!
  • Offline Gmail is so NOT interesting, but the Labs concept continues to provide small reasons not to switch away
  • Amazon Kindle 2 coming February 9th? Maybe I'll finally ditch books.
  • IE should stop *clicking* every time it loads a page; first thing I turn off (but I'm sure most people just deal with it)

Each one could have been a long-winded post like this one, but instead I got the thoughts off my chest and got feedback on them almost immediately.

Now having said all of that, I do still love blogging (and Windows Live Writer) and want to keep this site alive for the foreseeable future – just without the “web 2.0 remorse” of letting it sit here.  So I’ll continue to post long-form posts every month (or three or four) and I’d really like to start talking more about the new Windows Live Movie Maker once we’re ready to talk about it.  I’m thrilled to be working on a project so many people care so much about and is so well timed with market needs.  So I’d like to make sure I can have an ongoing dialogue with folks about it on this blog, on Twitter, and anywhere else I can.  Again, once we’re ready to talk more about it.  But that will hopefully be nice and focused, not the inane ramblings of some random dude.

If you still want the inane ramblings of some random dude, just catch me on Twitter ;)

Moving to Movie Maker

After some great years working on our web experiences, I realized over my parental leave that it was time for me to try something completely new; to stretch my brain in ways I haven’t before and be intimidated again by just how little I knew about something.  I’ve been around these parts since the first beta version of MSN Spaces in mid-2004 – and for a year and a half before that I was working on the underlying platform still in use – and have now seen many our efforts “grow up” into amazing Windows Live functionality like the What’s New feed, our new Profile, and our new People experience (one contact list!) 

I can actually remember when I was one of just a few people blogging regularly about our online services.  While that has taken a backseat recently (we have great marketing and a team blog) the passion to continually improve our online story is stronger than ever.  This past year was fantastic.  The team is functioning on such a high level and everyone is really, really proud of the work we did.  Yet as one wave comes to a close and another begins, it’s a natural time to make a move.

Now of course, there really isn’t a better group in the company to work in than Windows Live.  So while my #1 priority was to do something different, inspiring, and challenging, a close #1.1 was to make sure that whatever I did was within Windows Live.  So effective this week I’ve moved over to lead the Windows Live Movie Maker PM team – now a part of Windows Live as of the latest release.

Windows Live Movie Maker v2

There are so many reasons why I’m excited about this: it’s a v1 product that already has a big following...  there are big hard technical, UI, and set of project management challenges…  no one has really gotten this stuff “right” yet… the team is rock solid, experienced, and driven… and it’s an opportunity to really play a part in the new excitement around Windows PCs and show how good ol’ software can make a difference.

Curious about the new Windows Live Movie Maker?  You can learn about it here.  In the meantime, please send me your thoughts on Movie Maker – you know how to reach me (email is best).  Although if your feedback is about needing to see “time” in the product somehow, we’ve definitely heard this feedback loud and clear :)  (Remember, what’s currently out there is a very early beta!  There’s a lot of work happening in Redmond)

Favorite quotes on the Windows Live update

As you may have heard, the new and improved Windows Live is coming your way very, very soon.  We announced it last night at 9pm and so far, the feedback has been great.  This is certainly the most satisfying part of this job: shipping!  Shipping something you’re proud of that is.  Particularly with a release like this one that was very much a “redefinition” in a lot of ways. 

Long gone are the days when I was the only one blogging about our release though ;)  Check out our Windows Live Wire blog for more information on Windows Live.  And check out the video below for more depth:

 

Also – read the quotes below.  FUN.  Emphasis below is mine.

Hall underscored that Microsoft is trying to simplify the Web experience by bringing together people and content scattered all over the Web and across personal computers, phones and other devices. Having one central place to organize and manage information relieves some of the social networking fatigue people are experiencing, he said. To that end, Microsoft formed partnerships with a number of  companies including LinkedIn, Photobucket and Twitter. – LA Times blog

It could be pretty exciting for Live.com users before the year ends, especially for U.S. users. And this could make or break, Live.com’s relevance to Microsoft’s suite of web products. – Search Engine Journal

This is Big: Overall, these new services represent a major upgrade to the online part of the Windows Live suite. Microsoft is clearly trying to challenge both Yahoo and Google with its new photo application, while the new profiles and groups tie all the Live services together into a very sophisticated social network. – Read/Write Web

Microsoft announced Windows Live Profiles today, which takes some lessons from social networking sites and FriendFeed. The new profile page provides a central hub for all your online activities on Windows Live. More interestingly, your profile can also aggregate updates from other services, such as your Twitter account, your blog feed, reviews from Yelp, or photos you have posted on Flickr. You can also feed any standard RSS stream into your profile…You can choose the amount of personal information you want to display in your profile and Microsoft gives you very granular control over what parts of your profile you want to share with others. You can, for example, choose to share your last name and location only with friends, but make information about your relationship status and hometown public. You can also choose to make some items only available to a small sub-set of your friends. – Read/Write Web 

In addition to rolling out new services, Microsoft has given Windows Live a facelift. The overall interface is now less crowded with blocks of personalized content.  Another nice customization feature is the ability to add a personalized slideshow in the upper right-hand corner of your Windows Live Home page. The slideshow images are pulled from your Windows Live Photo collection.  Microsoft makes some serious strides into the future of cloud computing with this update to Windows Live. I like what I see, but if Microsoft is serious about aggregating online services, it should bring in more of the giant services that already have millions of members. Noticeably missing from Microsoft's long list of partners are AOL, Facebook, Google, and MySpace. – PC World

In many respects, Live Photos clearly competes directly with Yahoo's Flickr, though while it has a lot of Flickr's features, its focus is more on sharing pictures with a small group of friends or family than with the whole Internet. We have been using Live Photos for about two months now, and our overall impression is extremely positive.Read/Write Web 

On the whole, the overhaul's quite impressive.  The layout encourages people to create (and/or flesh out) user profiles, and then offers the sort of Friend Feed-style updates to which we've become accustomed.  Profiles will also be useful when it comes to tagging and sorting photos, or creating groups… What's more: it's done all this in a timely manner.  The new Windows Live will be available to everyone by early 2009, with U.S. customers seeing it rather sooner.  This should put Microsoft ahead of Yahoo, which is bucket testing a similar sort of upgraded homepage…  Chris Jones, Microsoft's corporate vice president of Windows Live Experience Program Management, tried to sum up the accomplishment in a statement.  He explained, "Our customers have friends across the Web.  They communicate through many unconnected Web services and want access to it all from a single location - without worrying about how it's done.  Now Windows Live takes care of that, with an integrated personal communication service that works across the Web with optimized experiences on the PC and mobile phone." -- WebProNews

Experience Matters

If you’ve been following the news about Windows 7 and Office 14 coming from PDC, one thing should be immediately apparent: experience matters these days at Microsoft.  Ever since the release of Windows Vista and Office 2007, I’ve seen a real shift for the better in the way people are approaching UI design within the company.  No longer is it an afterthought – it’s baked into the product development cycle at almost every level, and people are paying particular attention to the way our software makes people feel.  It’s fun to watch (and certainly has something to do with ramped up competition with Apple).

There are a number of great examples of this over the last year or so at the company – and a LOT more to come over the next few months and years.  But I wanted to take a minute and highlight a few of my favorites just in case you haven’t been following all the recent news.  These are very specific examples, but I think the uber-message is that you should expect (and demand) great experiences from Microsoft now and in the future.  Never again should we release something as confusing as older versions of Office or Windows Media Player or as offensively colorful as Windows XP :)

Zune 3 Now Playing – Just a phenomenal visualization for your music.  It uses album art and stock photography of the artist, along with text to give you a real visceral reaction.  It’s one of the nicest looking things in the industry in my opinion, and part of the reason why I *love* the Zune client (the Zune Pass is another reason).  Pictures don’t do this justice, you should check out the video.

image

New Xbox Experience – I’ll admit that I have yet to play with this, but I’ve watched the demos a dozen times and have heard great things from friends here on the beta.  I think people are going to be wow-ed by this update later this month.  To be honest, I’m already wow-ed that a 3-year old system that should be obsolete by now is getting such a huge update.  It will feel brand-new again.

E3_keynote_MyXbox

Office 2007 & Office 14 – I can’t talk about Office 14 in any detail yet (and don’t know much yet either) but Office 2007 has set the usability bar high.  If you haven’t used the new Fluent UI with live previews, the ribbon, SmartArt, and a dozen other improvements large and small, you’re missing out.  I think the Office 2007 user experience will go down in the books as an update just as impactful as toolbars and menus themselves.  You’ll start to see it in appear in Windows 7 and Windows Live (Movie Maker) over time as well.

MicrosoftOffice2007

Windows 7 Superbar – I’ve now been using Windows 7 for about a month and I dig the Superbar (that’s just a nickname, I think).  The functionality itself is great, combining the best elements of the old Windows model (Quickstart, taskbar, system tray) with new usability improvements like jump lists, progress indicators, Aero Peek (which lets you peek in at window contents) and more.  One subtle feature which shows the serious focus on detail is “color hot-track”. 

Long Zheng describes color hot-track here: “When hovering over the icons in the taskbar, the color highlight of the “glass” button is actually different from application to application. How it works is dynamically abstracting the color values of the application icon to find the most dominant RGB value. Besides the obvious eye-candy, this feature delivers some sentimental value by making it easy to identify applications by color.”  Examples:

2982741748_87a1ea9ab5

2982746374_684c5cdb1a 

Images from Long Zheng.

Windows Live Services, Wave 3 – Can’t talk about this one yet, but one of our tenets early on was “beautiful, fast, and polished” - which should tell you about how hot it’s going to be.  There have been previews posted in some places though where you can at least get an early feel for what we’re thinking.  Stay tuned on this one, it won’t be long.

In all, I’m pretty excited to see Microsoft really embracing experiences in such a deep way.

5 weeks away from the office

(Sorry, I accidentally posted an early draft of this earlier today)

One of the great benefits of working for Microsoft is our parental leave policy.  Even though we had our baby almost a year ago, you have up to 12 months to take your leave… which really helps work around project schedules, life events, vacations, and most importantly to me, making sure you’re home with your child at the “right” time. 

For me, spending time with my daughter as she approaches 1-year old was infinitely more satisfying than it would have been had I taken the time when she was born.  She’s barking at dogs, giggling all the time, playing hide & seek, and is saying “Dada” now.  We had a lot of fun.  She’s an amazing little girl.

374153545_SFLZy-O

But my time off wasn’t all play.  I had a bunch of little projects I wanted to finish around the house that I just haven’t had much dedicated time to do all year – so I used this work-less time to crank through them.  Here’s the list in all its glory:

  • First of all, I was sick the entire time.  So I had a few doctor visits.  Turned out to be a series of colds thanks to my daughter’s daycare, but it threw a serious wrench in my gym time.
  • Took a 5-day trip to the Washington coast to kick off my leave – lots of relaxation, reading, and walking on the beach with the fam.
  • Cleaned out my closet & donated my old clothes.  I try and do this at least 1-2x/year, but for some reason this time it just felt more satisfying.
  • Cleaned out bookshelves and recycled old books; sold old DVDs/CDs.
  • Cleaned out bathroom drawers and realized it’s much easier to keep them organized than to organize them, so that’s the plan now.
  • Stella and I took afternoon trips to the Seattle Aquarium (she loved it), the Woodland Park Zoo, the Children's Museum, and we even went to a parents & kids movie with some friends which was fun.
  • Rented a wide angle lens to experiment.  Stella and I did a photo shoot with the lens and I got a few great shots.  In all, I probably took over 2,000 photos of the munchkin.
  • Spent some quality park time at Myrtle Edwards Park, showing Stella the boats in the Sound (the photo above is from that visit).
  • Filled up my gas tank just ONCE in 5-weeks!  WOW.
  • BIG project: Scanned hundreds of old documents using a ScanSnap, and then proceeded to shred almost all of them.  Our home is now 99% paperless and it feels great.
  • Downloaded Zune 3 and Windows Live beta – Love them both!
  • Rebalanced all of our investments - not like it mattered once the crisis hit.  Would have been better off not having any!
  • Applied for life insurance for my wife & me and started a 529 college fund for our daughter.
  • Sold off almost all of my old Xbox games (sad – expected to get $5-10/ea but instead clocked in at $1-2/ea)
  • BIG project: Digitally encoded 25+ VHS tapes and recycled them (this is worthy of another post as it took 4 trips to Best Buy to make this work – it was pretty horrible)
  • Made a video with Windows Movie Maker for my Mom’s birthday from footage from 20 years ago.
  • Bought a Polar heart rate monitor, learned how to use it, and started a more intense fitness program once back to normal.
  • Ignored my blog completely thanks to Twitter which has become my outlet.
  • Changed almost all of my online passwords after reading horror stories (see: Sarah Palin’s Yahoo account)
  • Learned a lot more about politics and started following the campaign on an hourly basis (I’m hooked now!)
  • Bought a new fireproof media safe for my backup hard drives & miniDV tapes, transferred everything to it.
  • Renewed my driver’s license.
  • Took a 5-day trip to Pasadena to visit family & friends and soak in the sun!

In all – a very satisfying leave.

Windows Live Wave 3 Beta

The new beta is here!  If you're wondering why I've been so quiet this year, this is a big part of the reason.  The other one is an 11-month old squirt who likes to open dresser drawers and pull everything out over and over.  This beta release is significant for a number of reasons, but I think the thing you'll really start to notice (especially as we rollout Wave 3 final with the "rest of it") is that Windows Live really stands for something now.  There's just so much cool stuff happening now.

Go to http://download.live.com/ and get the newest Messenger, Mail, Photo Gallery, Movie Maker, Writer, Toolbar, and Family Safety.  Photo Gallery is probably the app I use the most outside of Messenger.  Just a couple weeks ago I created my first panoramic stitch out of photos of the Washington coast (yes, I know this feature has been around for a year - but I just started taking decent photos!)  This feature alone is worth the price of admission (well... it's free!)  But this was ONE click to create.

Stitch - beach

Evernote – Web, Windows, Mac, Windows Mobile, iPhone!

I'm using a new note-taking app for project notes, personal notes, goal tracking, checklists, and random brainstorms: Evernote.

Evernote is really the definition of software plus services working harmoniously together to get things done.  Similar to Remember The Milk, which is also available just about everywhere, it’s just a shining example of what can get done with a small, dedicated team of people.

I’m currently using Evernote on a couple Windows PCs, a Mac, and my new iPhone (and before this, on my Windows Mobile phone!) and changes made to notes on one device are almost immediately available on all the others.  The iPhone app is optimized for quick note-taking on the go (with video + audio, and even location tagging!) while the Mac and Windows apps are fully-featured note-takers.  Frankly, neither of them compare well with OneNote’s elegance and ease of use (I don't even really like the Windows app - and I love OneNote)... but the fact that my notes can be accessed and even edited from so many different places makes up for that.  I’ve always wanted OneNote for the Mac (and web) for the times that I’m not on a PC, but more importantly having my full notes available from my phone without ever having to connect to a PC is just a killer feature. (Anything that doesn’t sync wirelessly with an online service is dead to me these days)

The all-time coolest thing happens when you hook Jott up to Evernote though.  I called Jott and just started speaking to see how it would work, and about 5 minutes later the following note appeared directly in my Evernote notebook:

I'm just testing out the note taking feature from Jott to Ever note(?). I really would like this to work because if it does, it would be a fantastic way for me to be able to take note on the go, in the car, and so on. Thanks.

Perfect example of what technology can do for you.

New Xbox 360 goodies - Dashboard + Netflix

For almost three years I've used my Xbox 360 just about every day - yet I haven't played a game for more than 10 minutes since 2006.  We use it in our house for renting movies (great quality, skimpy selection), watching DVD/"old" HD-DVD movies, streaming Zune Pass and WMA/MP3 music from the PC upstairs, and about once a month, streaming photos for a traditional slideshow for guests.  In our house, the 360 is our entertainment hub - we could almost care less that it plays games too.

Yet I have to admit, when I was in the Apple Store amidst all the chaos the other day, I yearned for an Apple TV.  The visuals are great, but the thing that almost had me is the selection of content (movies mostly, which is what we care about in our house).  Xbox Live Marketplace just doesn't have the same quantity/selection.  Yet did I really want yet another set-top box?  Remote?  Wi-Fi endpoint?  Not really.  I wanted my 360 to just *do* this.  Because no matter how great the Apple TV would end up being for us, we would still need to use the 360 for the Media Center capabilities + the WMA Lossless support, and adding yet another piece of hardware to the fold always complicates things for me.  With my luck, it would crash and destroy my router like the last time I tried connecting something.

Well... Wish granted two days later.  I love technology.

The 360 will have an all-new dashboard (check out the video) updating it's slightly dated look with snazzy new visuals, avatars, and an all-around more immersive experience.  But the kicker: Netflix queue integration.  Add a movie to your Netflix queue on the web and it appears in the queue on your Xbox with direct streams that start in 30 seconds.  It doesn't look like it's HD quality yet, but it's something - and I can't imagine HD is too far off.

E3_keynote_MyXbox oscarInstantQueue

This is cool stuff - I seriously thought my 360 would be obsolete by 2008 (I bought it in 2005) but it looks like it's getting another BIG upgrade.  It'll feel brand new again (although the fan is still too loud!)

Read more:
http://www.xbox.com/en-US/community/events/e32008/articles/0714-nxe.htm

And a great write-up:
http://venturebeat.com/2008/07/14/netflix-comes-to-the-xbox-360-did-microsoft-just-destroy-the-apple-tv/

 

Torres Mike

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I'm a Microsoft employee living in Seattle with my wife, daughter, and our two cats. Note: I do not accept Messenger, Xbox, Zune, or Friend requests from people I don't know... sorry.

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