News

Monday night reading

Phil Wolff | November 27, 2006 05:33 PM
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Skype 3.0 Beta for Windows; bugfix build 137

Phil Wolff | November 22, 2006 10:35 AM

3.0 beta logoIf you're using the 3.0 Beta for Win, get today's version 3.0.0.137. Lots of bugfixes, no new features. Still 19 MB. Changelog. Once you're running 3, join public chats about it in the Skype English Blog Chat and Skype Journal's Skype 3.0 discussion.

Wednesday morning scan

Phil Wolff | November 22, 2006 03:54 AM

Technology and Products

  1. MobiGater GSM-to-Skype gateway, plugs into your PC, passes Skype calls to your mobile phone. Also lets you speed dial your Skype buddies from your mobile, ringing them on Skype. From Bulgaria to 20 countries

  2. Accessing Skype APIs with Ruby. Pretty easy, if you know the Ruby programming language.

  3. Moodgeist pinger for Linux. The better to let the universe know how you're feeling. Even if you're using Linux.

  4. 10 Things to Know About Skype Ap2Ap Programming. Read this before you code. Adrian Cockroft.

  5. Skype on Solaris. More Sun bloggers spread the word.

  6. US Robotics' webcam. Is the 9640 cheaper (at $40) and smaller than the Logitech Fusion?

Advanced topics

  1. Project San Dimas, an experimental eBay desktop, built on the Adobe Apollo platform using web services. Congrats to eBay's Alan Lewis.

  2. Nokia: Hyperlinking Reality via Phones. "Nokia researchers are working on a system that allows physical objects to be identified and connected to the Internet through mobile-phone screens."

  3. MashupU. Anyone from the Skype developer community available to teach at MIT, 15-16 January 2007?

  4. Everything is Miscellaneous lecture. David Weinberger's speech mp3 (46:53, 22.5 MB) at the Scottish Learning Festival.

  5. Cooperation Commons. Research project by the Institute for the Future and Howard Rheingold to study cooperation and collective action.

  6. A Voluntarily Loosely Organized Organization. How does Skype support emergent management practices?

Business

  1. Boom when UAE's Etisalat opens up to Skype? Skype Wi-Fi phone vendor Belkin is hoping UAE lifts Skype ban sooner than later.

  2. Death of the phone company: "There will be a custom communications experience generated dynamically for every context, and it may be personalised for the individual communicators."

  3. Death of Skype: Australian ISP: "Skype packets, in the world that we are heading to, will be able to be seen by all telcos and all telcos will have the capacity to prioritise or de-prioritise those packets."

  4. ISP Xtra: No Skype shaping. Computerworld: Despite terms of service which allow it,

    Telecom's retail ISP Xtra says there is no rate-limiting for Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) applications, contrary to reports in the media and complaints in web and Usenet forums. "Applications such as Skype can be used," Xtra spokeswoman Lenska Papich says. No traffic management is applied to Skype, she adds.

  5. The future is bright .. The future is 3 .. How 3's switch to flat rates for mobile data unleashes explosive growth. Great essay, by Ajit Jaokar, about taking down the "walled garden" (controlling everything in the ecosystem) in favor of an Open Garden. via John Furrier.

  6. WordPress follows SixApart and SocialText into Corporate IT. SixApart needs this: one enterprise vendor is a novelty, four is a market. See also Traction and Blogtronix. Skype may benefit from enterprise adoption of other social media like blogs and wikis if they jump on the knowledge management and collaboration memes, and further integrate Skype into blogs.

  7. Ten Worst Internet Acquisitions Ever. Skype is number 9. Others: Hotmail, MySimon, BlueMountain, Lycos, Netscape, GeoCities, Excite, AOL, and Broadcast.com. A hard meme to kill.

  8. The Peanut Butter Manifesto. Yahoo!'s Brad Garlinghouse rocks. Messenger's executive sponsor bets his career on focusing Yahoo!

Skype Goes Truly Mobile....

Jim Courtney | November 16, 2006 11:23 AM

.. in the UK at least. Today, as one partner participating in the 3 X-Series service announcement by Hutchison Whampoa's 3 Group, Skype has announced its first truly mobile offering where Skype users can make "free" Skype-to-Skype calls on a mobile phone. Starting December 1, 3 Group will launch a new flat fee mobile broadband Internet service in the UK. In the press release related to this announcement Skype CEO Niklas Zennström said:

With 3, I am very proud to say that for the first time, our users can now try out making Skype calls on the move using a mobile phone. We always want to delight our users by letting them try out new ways of keeping in touch. This is a real milestone for Skype because now you can use Skype beyond the PC, no matter where you happen to be.

CIO Now has an excellent detailed description of the impact for Skype; the key points being:

  • 3 Group will launch the new X-Series service December 1 in the U.K. and roll it out to the other countries in which 3 Group operates (including Ireland, Austria, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Israel, Australia and Hong Kong) in early 2007.
  • While it will be a flat-fee mobile broadband Internet service, no pricing has yet been announced.
  • continue reading.....

Skype for Mac 2.5 Beta ships

Phil Wolff | November 15, 2006 08:27 AM

Download 2.5.038. Lots of bug fixes, a few new features, and many usability improvements.

Just for those following along, Skype 2.5 Beta for Windows shipped in early May 2006, five and a half months ago. Hat tip to John Maas.

From the change log:

New features:

  • SMS
  • improved history list in main window
  • ripple animation effects (Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) only)
  • ringing device selection to audio preferences

Changes:

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Surfing, in no particular order...

Phil Wolff | November 12, 2006 07:37 PM
  1. Skypest.com is a market for buying/selling Skype names. Like trading in domain names. Hmmm. Check your wallet. And start ego surfing.

  2. Google added Skype to the free Google Pack. Excellent distribution partner. Also explains why the Google toolbar comes with the free Skype toolbar bundle.

  3. Skype's Firefox toolbar catching some users by surprise. They're surprised because they don't notice toolbars installing with Skype 3.0 beta for Windows. (just click next.) They are happily surprised: they like the phone number hotlinking. I've been doing this since the summer of 2005 using the Skypelinkify script.

  4. How to use a hex editor to tweak Skype. Now if I only didn't have to use a hex editor.

  5. Debian and ubuntu linux users have a simple Skype install now. Love those .deb packages.

  6. Business 2.0 profiles a software trainer who uses Skype. The shot of Bill Lewis Skyping his students from the Puerto Vallarta beach in his shorts. Classic. The story says entrepreneurs have new opportunities when phone service is free/cheap. Good one for Skype's PR team.

  7. The Skypecasts service graduated from Preview to Beta. When?

  8. SPIM (spam over instant messaging) causes Skypers to shut down calls from strangers. Can you imagine only getting email from people you already know? Phone calls? Maybe it's time to start white/grey/black lists, like for email?

  9. PhoneBoy picks SightSpeed video over Skype 3.0. Just one data point, right?

  10. Will Skype continue free SkypeOut calls in the US, Canada, and elsewhere in 2007? Millions want to know. A few, so they can top up their Skype accounts. Others, so they can start shopping.

  11. Waiting for Skype to pay off for eBay. A what-happened-in-the-year-since-eBay-bought-Skype story by the International Herald Tribune's Kevin J. O'Brien. I liked Martin's quote: "Skype is in danger of becoming the Netscape of voice over Internet protocol phone companies... Skype may prove that you can be the first to innovate a piece of software but the last to find a way to make money from it." Typical Geddes, and everyone else pretty much said what you'd expect them to say.

 

 

Skype 3.0 -- New Feature Guide....

Jim Courtney | November 9, 2006 02:39 PM

Yesterday Skype released its initial Skype for Windows 3.0 beta with several new features. However, the press release does not really show the entire picture and, in fact, two of the four features mentioned were available in the previous 2.6 beta - namely, Click-to-Call and Skypecasts Live. Click-to-Call is simply an embedding of the previously available Skype for Web Toolbars supported by the Phone Number Recognition COM-component. It is a very handy feature that I have been using for some time.

But the other two -- Public Chats and a User Interface refresh -- bring some significant changes:

Public Chats -- my first activity was to walk through the Public Chat setup wizard. But I quickly realized it should be called the Skype Watercooler. The algorithm allows you to control who will participate; you can invite via emails, chat session or via a web page. You can control if a participant is active (able to contribute to the discussion) or passive (can only read the discussion). Lots of flexibility here. Whereas Skypecasts are publicly exposed such that anyone can join, the level of participation here is determined by the level of exposure you provide for your invitation.

But most interesting is to get the experience that comes from the persistence of a public chat. Yesterday I joined the Skype 3.0 Public Chat started by Phil; this morning when I came to my PC I could quickly review all the conversation that had occurred overnight (hey, those Europeans start their day early). Skype's Public Chat will become an interesting tool within the social networking landscape but Skype Marketing needs to look at a more definitive, attention grabbing name for the service. Let me say it again: Skype Watercooler.

User Interface: Lots to talk about here but I will just highlight some features:

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Midweek reading

Phil Wolff | November 7, 2006 02:03 PM

Coming up:

User stories and practices:

Products:

Industry News:

Skype for Mac 2.0 Goes Gold

Jim Courtney | October 23, 2006 07:34 AM

This morning Skype announced the gold release of Skype for Mac 2.0; finally a released Skype for the Mac with video support. Just in time to take advantage of all those iSight cameras built into more recent models such as MacBook Pro and MacBook. And, of course, one can now hold two party cross-platform video calls between Mac and Windows versions of Skype.

We would appreciate receiving your feedback via comments on your experiences using this much requested and long awaited version. I am working with one test case to check out this statement:

We've improved the video quality and made changes so that video calling can now work on older systems allowing more of our Mac community can use it.

The next challenge for Skype is to develop video conference calling similar to that already available with SightSpeed.

We look forward to hearing your feedback. It gives us an incentive to get the handling of Skype Journal's Comments fixed asap.

Update re Test Case: My acquaintance had attempted to use the beta Skype for Mac with his G4 800 MHz Mac - now the minimum requirement for Skype for Mac 2.0. He had reported problems with the beta version; however, on downloading the released version, we were able to establish a cross-platform Windows-to-Mac video session this afternoon with no problems - backing up Skype's statement quoted above. The biggest issue was that his three year old Mac's video camera does not provide the sharpest quality but it certainly delivered an acceptable quality for a video conversation. [As an aside, this G4 800MHz Mac does not meet minimum specs for use of SightSpeed on the Mac. On the other hand, SightSpeed's ability to do a three party conference with his two daughters in two different cities has become one inducement to upgrade to a new Mac soon.]

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Skype Restored in Jordan

Jim Courtney | October 13, 2006 01:58 AM

Just over a week ago Phil reported that Jordan's telecom regulator had ordered that Skype be blocked. It was a short-lived blockade; the decision has been reversed. According to a report from Middle East North Africa Financial News:

Director of the commission's regulatory department, Al Ansari Al Mashaqbah, confirmed yesterday that the recent decision to block Skype had been reversed.

The official told The Jordan Times that the security issues, cited as the reason for the block, had been resolved.

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My weekend online

Phil Wolff | October 9, 2006 08:45 AM

Jan in Malaysia teases: Russian engineers reverse engineer Skype.

VoIP Hacks by MacVoIP's Ted Wallingford is shipping. It's a must-have if it's half as good as Ted's blog, or the other Hacks books.

Incident Commander looks so cool. Sim City for crisis training. Can't wait to try it, to check out the multiplayer communication and collaboration. Any VoIP inside?

Stop Conflict Before It Starts. Temporary foreign aid that targets sharp drops in income may stave off civil unrest, says a Berkeley economist. imho, MetroFi and secure Skype should be part of aid packages that prevent crises.

Slideshare.net is kinda brilliant. Elegant, simple to use. I don't know how much knowledge (ignorance?) is trapped in slide shows, but people have been using PowerPoint for a generation. Can't wait to see how they pitched invasions to presidents, disastrous mergers to CEOs, disruptive startups (Skype) on the demise of the disruptees. Slideshare is history by bullet point. The social media elements aren't bad either: blog-like and YouTube elements are familiar.

eWeek compared three "conference" systems this summer. Elluminate Live, Interwise, and Sonexis. The cheapest is $100 per seat. How does that compare with Skype, Unyte desktop sharing and freeware?

U.S. telecom "reform" as an object lesson? Scott Bradner summarizes hard evidence that ILECs have no real competition, killing off contenders. Says there's hope for Canada.

Vishing. Phishing by VoIP. As if Spit, spam via internet telephony, wasn't bad enough.

Tracks in the Snow. Three measures of success come long after IT projects are deployed. Professor Nelson says key success measures include usage, value to the organization, and building an org's knowledge capacity.

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Beyond what Reuters Told Us .. More details of Niklas' interview with Helsingin Sanomat

Jim Courtney | October 3, 2006 11:35 AM

During Canada's Centennial Year (1967) I was host for a student exchange with Finnish students; we have kept up contact over the past 39 years. Last week I asked one of them if s/he could translate the actual Helsingin Sanomat article reporting on their interview with Niklas Zennström (registration required) or at least give me the gist of it. Below (with minimal editorial correction of spelling and grammar)  is what my friend calls her/his "amateur translation".

The interview certainly goes well beyond the content of the Reuters summary report. (On the other hand there is nothing there that is going to impact eBay's stock price!) Note that, while my friend has been using English in both personal and business activities all these years, Skype Journal is not responsible for any mistranslation.

Of note in Niklas' comments:

  • Niklas sees the future for wireless as being in WiFi (and WiMax) networks once they become more ubiquitous and more easily accessible. (reinforcing Ted Wallingford's recent comments on WiFi as the primary VoIP wireless medium)
  • The issues with developing Skype for GSM or other wireless mobile phones relate to both processing power and memory issues (which translate into latency issues discussed in a post last weekend).
  • He sees current rates for calls to wired lines as being the lowest we will see as someone has to pay for at least the connection.
  • He only sees an explosion of mobile VoIP only once there are unlimited use fixed rate data plans available.
  • The path to Skype as a ubiquitous mobile platform may be through "rebel" or "challenger" mobile operators who want to challenge the larger legacy service providers. But this is along the lines of what Andy was concluding in his recent "Being on the Inside" post.

A summary translation paragraph by paragraph goes as follows:

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Sony Mylo - In Stores Now...

Jim Courtney | September 22, 2006 05:24 PM

After a lunch today at the Metreon entertainment complex's food court in San Francisco, Phil and I walked into the Sony store and found the new Mylo available for purchase. Yesterday was the launch day.

While we did not have an environment for any full testing (and the WiFi access was a bit flaky) three comments:

  • Phil was able to call his mobile phone from the Mylo's Skype client
  • I was able to access my Skype account from the Mylo's web service
  • My first impression -- this may be for Sony in this decade what the Walkman was for them in the 1980's. Web access, photos, videos, WiFi connectivity, media player -- they were all there in a device smaller than the original Walkman.

An evaluation unit is en route; we will provide a more complete report once we have had a chance to work with it for a couple of weeks.

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VON Fall 2006 Media Reports

Jim Courtney | September 19, 2006 07:17 PM

During VON Fall 2006 I did two podcasts with Jon Arnold on some aspects of the show:

  • Tuesday: Discussing the morning's two keynotes (Jeff Pulver and Ted Leonsis) as well as the IM session the previous afternoon.
  • Wednesday: A discussion of Canadian companies participating at VON Fall.

Also Jon and I were both individually interviewed by TechNewsWorld about the implications of Skype's announcement of the Skype 2.0 beta with video.

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VON Fall 2006 Tidbits....

Jim Courtney | September 14, 2006 03:48 PM

VON Fall 2006 is over; it certainly helped put into perspective where we are in the IP voice and video communications space at this time.

Video I: Jeff Pulver's presentation included a demonstration of the Vividas high definition video streaming using the Ghost Rider trailer. Select "Watch Trailer in High Definition" from the options. Amazing quality on my 1650 x 1080 laptop screen but when Jeff showed this on the large screen at VON Fall with a full surround sound system, it was as if we were in our local movie theater for both video and audio quality.

Video II: Ted Leonsis, Vice Chairman AOL & President AOL Audience Business, has blogged about his keynote presentation where he mentions the several new video services that AOL has recently launched or will be launching in the near future. From commercial music video to personal video services, suffice it to say that, with AOL's access to not only AOL's web resources but also Time Warner's content resources, AOL finally has gotten around to leveraging all the potential foreseen in the original AOL-Time Warner deal.  Sometimes it takes a few kicks at the can to get it right; in this case the deal was done well ahead of the availability of the technology and infrastructure needed to leverage these assets fully.

One exhibitor who drew a lot of attention was Trufone who exhibited their software that brings VoIP to the mobile phone. Martin Geddes has one of the phones with which it is currently compatible and I'm sure we'll hear from Martin soon on his experience with it. Personally I need to wait until they have compatibility with Nokia N70 or Nokia N93.

Skype compatible hardware was exhibited by Ascalade, RTX with their Dual Phone as well as a new line of cordless SIP Phones with dual VoIP/PCN capability, Polycom with their HD Voice-enabled Communicator Speakerphone, amongst others. As well Global IP Sound and Trinity Convergence (post to come next week) were talking about their voice engines used in various Skype products.

And what is PCN? Public Communications Network ... with all the graying of the line between PSTN and VoIP technology, Andy Abramson's new term for the future networks evolving in the communications space. The PSTN is not going to just go away but is going to change.

Personally I learned a lot from both the presentations I attended as well as several interviews on which I have reported or will be reporting.

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Can AOL Become Carrier 2.0 By Executing on Voice 2.0 Manifesto?

Jim Courtney | September 7, 2006 05:40 AM

AOL has a long history of innovation. Initially launched as a proprietary pre-Internet personal communications platform building up to several million users via dialup connections, AOL has evolved its integration into the Internet to the point where it recently broke down its "closed garden" business model and opened up the majority of its content and services to anyone visiting their site. It has certainly gone down a bumpy road with its history of balancing the conflicting needs of innovation against the needs of an operation bureaucracy looking for a profitable business model. At one point it was the poster child for the Bubble 1.0 bust as the business world tried to work out business models to provide a profitable combination of both infrastructure services and (syndicated) content. Breaking down the walled garden is but one example of the direction it is going under new leadership.

Last week there were several posts (Aswath, GigaOm) about the closure of AOL's TotalTalk, where AOL effectively recognized there is little to gain by playing in the pure legacy telephone replacement game and has decided to abandon it. Earlier this week there were several posts (Jon Arnold, Andy Abramson, Mark Evans) discussing Vonage's latest quarterly results; the common theme is that Vonage is spending such enormous sums on customer recruitment that there is little hope of profitability in the foreseeable future. Cablecos and legacy telcos offering DSL services have a leg up as they already have a customer base to whom they can market. But Andy at VoIP Watch sums it up best when talking about the demise of AOL Total Talk in his Requiem for the Future of VoIP:

Rather than look at it as a failure, my take on this is AOL really has seen the future sooner than others. Much like the BT announcement earlier this week about their softclient, and like their other online portal player competitors including Yahoo, Google and MSN, AOL's Voice Team has seen the future of telephony and is moving in that direction with AIM PhoneLine, and the burgeoning ecosystem that already has started to bubble earlier this month at the VoIP Developer's Conference, and will likely have a big boost at VON in Boston next month.

But unlike Yahoo and MSN who have so many internal battles to fight, AOL as part of Time Warner has leadership that is smart enough to not fight a marketer (Time Warner Cable) who wants to sell a phone 1.0 replacement, and instead is focusing on Phone 2.0 and where it can be.

Today AOL issued a press release outlining their execution on the Voice 2.0 Manifesto through building an ecosystem around their AIM Triton IM client and its AIM PhoneLine service called the Open AIM PhoneLine initiative. AOL will introduce three API's this fall that will give developers and hardware partners the ability to:

  • Personalize the AIM Phoneline service by adding ringback tones and unique ring tones for frequent callers.
  • Enable a wide variety of USB devices such as speakerphones and phone adapters that will allow standard cordless phones to initiate and receive calls with the AIM Phoneline service.
  • Build new call management functionality into the AIM Phoneline service such as context and relevance-based call handling that could treat each call on the basis of rules that use Caller ID, online presence, calendar activities and more.

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