On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:49:04 +0000 (UTC), Boris
<> wrote:
> I have Windows Mail on my Vista machine. I did a clean install of Windows
> 7, and I now see that Windows Mail is not included.
Correct.
Windows 7 comes with *no* e-mail or newsgroup program. Although many
people object to this, I think it's a step in the right direction,
since it leaves everyone more free to choose whatever program(s) he
likes best.
> I must down from the
> Windows Live collection of 'Live' applications.
No, not correct.
There are many choices available, both from Microsoft and
from third-parties. Some are free and some are for sale. Microsoft has
Windows Live Mail available for download for free and Outlook (a
different program from outlook express) available for sale, either
alone or as part of Microsoft Office.
Some people will tell you to use Windows Live Mail; others will tell
you to use Thunderbird; still others may have other recommendation. My
advice is to ignore all such recommendations. I personally use
Microsoft Outlook for e-mail and Forte Agent for newsgroups, but you
should try several and choose what *you* like best, rather than make
your decision based on what I, or anyone else, likes best.
> I went to http://download.live.com/wlmail to download Mail, and when I
> pressed the download button, I saw the file was named wlsetup-web.exe.
> Does this mean that to install Mail, I will first be installing the
> framework for installing any other Live applications I may want in the
> future? That is, is this like installing only Word from the Office suite?
Yes, it's something like that.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003
Please Reply to the Newsgroup