Skype 2.0 for iPhone: Is it worth it? |
- Skype 2.0 for iPhone: Is it worth it?
- Firefox for Windows starts 64-bit transition
- Report: Skype 2.0 with 3G ready for iPhone
Skype 2.0 for iPhone: Is it worth it? Posted: 31 May 2010 02:29 PM PDT (Credit: Screenshot by Jessica Dolcourt/CNET) It's been nearly six months since Apple gave 3G VoIP calls the green light, and Skype is just now following in the footsteps of VoIP clients like Fring and iCall by turning on support for calls over the data network with its own contribution: Skype for iPhone 2.0. There's just one catch: Skype's 3G calling is only on a trial basis for now. In early 2011, the VoIP company will levy a "small monthly fee," the amount of which remains undecided for now, according to online reports. Skype has not yet released information explaining how they'll charge for the service, but we're guessing subscribers will sign up through in-app purchasing. Skype 2.0 for iPhone in a 3G voice test I made some Skype calls over 3G to test out the sound quality while walking outside in a residential neighborhood and placing a call to Skype on an indoor PC. Call quality was strong during our test call, and we noticed that a call quality indicator on the app interface popped up to alert us to changes in service when we hit AT&T disruptions. The alert was useful, but only because I had turned on speakerphone to keep my eyes on the app. Had I pressed the iPhone to my ear or had the screen dimmed, a visual pop-up would have had little effect managing my expectations. (Credit: Screenshot by Jessica Dolcourt/CNET) As it was, voices sounded natural and clear, and neither the caller nor I noticed any lag time. This certainly bodes well for Skype's claim to have upgraded Skype-to-Skype calls to "near CD-quality" sound, though I wasn't immediately able to test the service on an international call. Is it worth the price? 3G calling on Skype's iPhone app is certainly useful, especially when signal is strong but Wi-Fi is nowhere in sight. But will paying up be worth it to callers, even if the fee is a nominal $5 a month? By charging for calls, Skype is setting itself up for two things. First, forcing a 3G subscription plan leverages a value proposition for international callers only, while foreshortening it for domestic callers. Skype will likely charge international callers far less to use its service than would the carriers when people are making a direct call. But for domestic callers, the benefits are far murkier. If Skype's goal is to get people to use its service, what incentive is there for domestic callers who already pay for a full data plan to dole out extra to make the same 3G calls over Skype's network? Paying for international calls over 3G does provide a service, and it's perfectly fair for Skype to charge for those services the same way it might for calls made to landlines and mobile phones. (Skype-to-Skype calls over Wi-Fi will remain free.) In addition, callers who already pay a premium to call landline and mobile numbers using Skype credit would surely frown on an additional surcharge to place calls over 3G. As a second foreseeable consequence, pushing callers to subscribe for Skype's service may encourage callers to use other services, like Fring, which uses Skype's service, along with others, as part of its multinetwork chat and VoIP app. Not only has Fring already allowed callers to tap Skype's services for 3G calling on iPhone for the past six months, it also has two-way video calling--a feature Skype for iPhone does not. Skype first introduced 3G calling in Skype Mobile, an app made available in late March for select BlackBerry and Android handsets on the U.S. Verizon network (video). As part of the Verizon deal, callers do not pay additional fees for 3G Skype calls. Originally posted at iPhone Atlas |
Firefox for Windows starts 64-bit transition Posted: 31 May 2010 02:17 AM PDT Mainstream microprocessors have been 64-bit for years. Operating systems have followed suit. Now it's time for a program used by hundreds of millions of people to make the leap: Firefox. Programmer Armen Zambrano Gasparnian announced the first 64-bit Firefox builds for Windows on Friday, offering an FTP site for those who want to download it. But the software isn't for mainstream users yet. For one thing, there's no installer included yet, though that work is under way, too. For another, the software is still one of the very raw "nightly" builds for developers. Support for 64-bit processors is one of the planned Firefox 4 features. Mozilla hopes to release Firefox 4 by the end of November. The transition to 64-bit computing often offers a modest computing performance boost, but the main reason for the transition is getting around the 4GB memory limit of 32-bit computing. Since relatively few applications today require that much memory--or even whatever fraction remains after the operating system and other applications claim their share--the 64-bit change for desktop computing has taken years. Apple's Safari, however, already made the 64-bit jump with Mac OS X 10.6, released in 2009. Internet Explorer on 64-bit Windows is offered in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. Google is working on 64-bit Chrome, too, though it appears the Windows version is a lower priority than 64-bit Mac OS X and Linux versions. One of the hurdles in moving to 64-bit versions is plug-in compatibility, notably Adobe Systems' Flash, which is available in 64-bit form only in an Adobe Labs version for Linux at present. And even though 64-bit processors now are common on PCs, 32-bit chips are often found in new high-end smartphones. Originally posted at Deep Tech |
Report: Skype 2.0 with 3G ready for iPhone Posted: 30 May 2010 01:42 PM PDT iPhone users will finally be able to take advantage of Skype 2.0, with 3G calling, according to a report. But after August they'll have to pay for the privilege of Skype-to-Skype calls with the new service. Gizmodo reported the iPhone-ready service and a "small monthly fee" associated with it (along with operator charges for data). Gizmodo also noted that upgrades include near CD-quality sound for Skype-to-Skype calls, faster start-up time, a better call-quality indicator, and quick access to the dial pad via the iPhone home screen. AT&T cleared the way for Skype on the iPhone late last year, when it tweaked its network to allow VoIP calls. Update, May 31 at 6 a.m. PDT: In a separate report, PC World reported that Skype had not yet decided how to charge for the 3G calls and that the fees would kick in "after the end of 2010." That report also said the new 3G service applies to the iPhone, iPhone 3G, and iPhone 3GS; users of the second- and third-generation iPod Touch can also use the Skype service, but only over Wi-Fi, since those devices lack 3G, and only with a compatible headset with microphone. Originally posted at News - Wireless |
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