David Pogue, New York Times: Video Chats Overcome Clunkiness
Columnist David Pogue in a New York Times article reviewing Skype 4.0 starts by going back to the AT&T video phone demonstrated at the 1964 New York World's Fair and user experience from then. Not a lot of calls due to technical and psychological issues. He talks about why Skype has been so widely accepted (did he remind us it was "free"?) and why Skype has been a survivor when up against iChat, MSN Messenger, SightSpeed and others.He goes on to mention several issues that have inhibited video calling in the past but then says:
He then went on to make calls using iChat, ooVoo and SightSpeed: "None of them matched Skype’s immediacy or video and audio quality." He discusses Skype's new level of audio quality (with the SILK codec) and reduced network bandwidth speed requirement. He mentions some features that he would still like to see and mentions what differentiates services such as SightSpeed. His closing comment places Skype video calling into a historical perspective:The video quality still varies when you use Skype. Fast Internet connections and fast computers still work better than slow ones. But if you do have a good setup — wow. With certain Logitech or Philips webcam models, Skype 4.0 can deliver a picture that’s as big and sharp and smooth as a TV picture (30 frames a second, 640 by 480 pixels), with almost no delay.
In my test calls to friends in California, New York and Virginia, we were amazed at what a difference it makes when the delay goes away. (Maybe, for its next trick, Skype can lend its technology to the world’s cellphone carriers.)
Go read David's post (free registration may be required); it's an excellent yet objective review of the personal video calling space from the end user perspective. I guess David doesn't watch Oprah; she seems to be using Skype High Quality Video almost daily according to reports from my wife...... Will we one day adjust to the idea of being on camera every time someone calls?
Nah.
In the end, video chatting isn’t a replacement for phone calls, but a supplement to them, a perfect way to check out someone’s new place, check in with distant family and friends or show off a new talent (or baby). They saw the possibilities back in 1964 — they just didn’t realize that we wouldn’t always want to use them.
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Labels: codecs, DavidPogue, design, jcourtney, mobile, oprah, review, SightSpeed, silk, software, stories, television, video
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2 Comments:
I'm crazy about Skype, ever since my daughter went to Europe on her semester abroad. It was a long time to be apart, and we felt "together" by using Skype. And she could see her baby brothers and their cuteness. What a great service. I have been waiting for it ever since I watched George Jetson cartoons as a kid.
New Skype user. I use a landline phone hooked into a Skype USB-RJ11 phone adapter that inserts into my computer's USB 2.0 computer port. Verizon High Speed DSL.
Discovered installing Skype as a system service in XPPro makes Skype rock solid: no dropped calls!! Search Community Forum - The UberOverlord - for this method. This makes Skype run deep in the heart of the OS like a submarine sailing deep in the depths of the ocean: safe from stormy seas above on the surface. For a PC, the surface is its desktop.
Amazing things I can do: run Skype while opening and closing folders, browsers, programs - even defrag my PC 's multiple drives while on a Skype call. Nothing can interupt my Skype call.
One problem remains: the wide range of call quality. People I call say that messages I left on their cell phones are not there; words from me are partially lost in conversation; and sometimes even my entire side of a conversation is missing - though I've always heard the caller on the other side in every case clearly and distinctly. Not sure about the codec Skype uses. Needs attention!!
I let go of ATT and its 35.00/month bill and replaced it with a 2.95/month unlimited USA/CA call subscription and a 4.00/ month charge for a Skype online phone number. I'm highly motivated to make Skype work. It can only get better!!
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