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Update: We have heard that some Microsoft Outlook 2010 Beta users are experiencing crashes when trying to use the new Outlook Social Connector (OSC) Beta (February Update) that was released today along with the LinkedIn Provider for Outlook. The OSC that was included with the Outlook 2010 Beta must be uninstalled before installing the new OSC Beta (February Update). After the February OSC update is installed, the LinkedIn Provider for Outlook can then be installed. This information is included on our Download Center page for the OSC Beta (February Update). If you have installed the OSC Beta (February Update) and Outlook is crashing, follow the steps outlined on this page. As a reminder, only 32-bit Outlook is supported right now. 64-bit support for the OSC will be available soon.
Update:
We have heard that some Microsoft Outlook 2010 Beta users are experiencing crashes when trying to use the new Outlook Social Connector (OSC) Beta (February Update) that was released today along with the LinkedIn Provider for Outlook.
The OSC that was included with the Outlook 2010 Beta must be uninstalled before installing the new OSC Beta (February Update). After the February OSC update is installed, the LinkedIn Provider for Outlook can then be installed.
This information is included on our Download Center page for the OSC Beta (February Update).
If you have installed the OSC Beta (February Update) and Outlook is crashing, follow the steps outlined on this page. As a reminder, only 32-bit Outlook is supported right now. 64-bit support for the OSC will be available soon.
In November 2009, we announced both the beta of Microsoft Office 2010 as well as the Outlook Social Connector. The Outlook Social Connector brings together communications history, contact information, and professional and social networking information into the Outlook experience.
We are continuing to deliver on that vision today with two new announcements. First, we’re proud to announce the public beta of LinkedIn for Outlook, which will enable our millions of Office 2010 Beta users to connect the OSC to a public network for the first time. Second, we're excited to announce partnerships with Facebook — the most popular social Web site in the world, and MySpace — a leading social platform connecting people through expression, content, and culture.
LinkedIn for Outlook brings together the most popular professional network with the world’s leading professional Inbox. Here are some of the things you can do today by downloading the beta:
We are proud to continue partnering with LinkedIn and we want to congratulate them on a job well done. With this beta, our customers are able to stay connected to their network without leaving the Outlook Inbox.
Our vision for Outlook (and the OSC) is to provide a communications hub that is vital to both professional and personal communications; by integrating with both Facebook and MySpace, Outlook 2010 enables you to connect not only to co-workers and colleagues, but with all of your friends and family within your Outlook Inbox.
Facebook for Outlook
You can view friends’ activities, photos, and status updates within Outlook — as well as grow your network by adding friends from the same view. Both Facebook for Outlook and MySpace for Outlook will be available later this year as our official release of Office 2010 approaches.
Finally, its important to mention that with multiple professional and social networks available for the Outlook Social Connector, the design of the OSC is such that your privacy and permissions settings on each of the networks you use are represented and respected within this experience. For example, if your profile photo and job title are publicly listed on a given network, then OSC users will see your photo and job title when receiving an e-mail from you (if they use that same network). Similarly, if you choose to restrict profile access on a given network, the OSC will respect that privacy. The goal of the OSC is not to create another social network or set of privacy settings for you to manage, but rather to bring the networks you already value and use to the Outlook experience.
To recap, here is what you can do today to get started with the Outlook Social Connector.
Note To use LinkedIn for Outlook requires the latest version of the Outlook Social Connector, which supports the 32-bit English version of the official Microsoft Office 2010 Beta. The beta of the Outlook Social Connector is provided as-is, is subject to change without notice, and does not include formal product support from Microsoft.
We are thrilled to reach this significant milestone with LinkedIn and to welcome both Facebook and MySpace to the Outlook Social Connector ecosystem. Stay tuned to this blog for more information from the Outlook team as we get closer to the launch of Office 2010!
Dev Balasubramanian – Outlook Product Manager
Michael Affronti – Outlook Program Manager
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SocialConnector.dll crashes my 32-bit Outlook 2010 beta on Win 7 64 bit.
When will we have the 64-bit version?
I must confirm that the new Social Connector crashes two Computers (32bit Office, 32bit Windows).
After installing this, Outlook will no longer start up. I've have removed the connector, but it still crashes outlook, not the computer. I'm using 64bit Win 7 Ultimate, with 32bit Office 2010.
Solution: Start Outlook in Safe mode (hold Ctrl) and then disable od remove the connector in COM add-ins. It will work again then.
Are businesses clamoring for this? My employer forbids access to all social sites even though we have a team that updates Facebook and Twitter. I'm curious as to whether other companies do the same.
I installed and it seems to work. I am confused, though. It created a new contact folder "LinkedIn" and downloaded all my LinkedIn contacts into that folder. So, now I have two contact folders and essentially every contact is in Outlook twice now, once in my standard contact folder and once in the LinkedIn folder. When I now search for contacts, I get two options for every contact. Somehow this does not look like a good solution, to create duplicates of all contacts. I also assume that once I add the Facebook connector, it will create another copy of each contact? What happens when I have Outlook Connector (i.e. my standard contact list will be synched with the Live contact store) and then add the Live connector? Will I have duplicates then that are not even coming from different web stores? Also, it is unclear to me what kind of synch status this LinkedIn folder has. Is this a one way sync from LinkedIn to Outlook? But I can edit contacts there, will those edits be uploaded to LinkedIn? What if I overwrite information in one of those contacts in Outlook that was provided online via LinkedIn? Also, these contacts don't show up on my phone. I have an Exchange account and the phone syncs via ActiveSync, but of course only with the default contact folder, not the LinkedIn one. Long story short: I think this is in general a good idea, but the details seem utterly unclear, confusing and not well designed. Really, this should be done in such a way that I never have to ask any of these questions...
Agreed it crashes my Outlook at Startup too. I'm 32bit OSC, 32bit OUtlook 2010 Beta and 64bit Win7 Ultimate. There's also a discussion on TechNet forums about it. Anyone from Microsoft care to comment on these issues?
LinkedIn has always had a toolbar for Outlook that worked fine and allowed for synchronization. And didn't crash the system. Why do we need it to be an Com add-in?
my outlook 2010 beta keeps crashing after I installed the connector. I tried multiple times with restarts. No luck so far.
well that broke everything, good thing i backed up email. now to reinstall it all
MS = Fail
Thanks for crashing my Outlook 32bit on Windows 7 RC 32bit. Had to disable the Social connector using Save mode
Second that ask for a 64-bit version?
Clean install of Win7 32bit with a clean install of Office 2010 32bit. OSC DLL crashes Outlook at startup every time. Thanks for the extra frustration today.
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