
Every year I see into Skype’s future, foretelling with unconvincing accuracy, cynicism and hope.
Platform:
SkypeKit licenses open up for servers. Blue Jeans Network already cut a private deal to run Skype on their servers. Skype will open this up widely, with a few strings.
Skype launches SkypeKit hosting. Why set up your own server farm when you can use Skype’s?
More developers come to market with Skype inside. Seven smart TV or over-the-top TV hardware add-ons will announce they come with Skype inside at CES 2012 in January.
Skype introduces its voice user interface API. Taking lessons from Nuance and Siri, Skype defines a command vocabulary for Eesti and 20 other languages so you can dial, answer, and mute calls without using a keyboard, tablet or mouse. No voice-to-IM transcription at launch.
Skype for Cars. A US 4G wireless operator will announce hands-free skyping standard in a partner auto company’s 2013 car dashboard system. Recalled when dead car batteries are blamed on Skype.
Skype Desktop API remains a bastard stepchild, without full access to Skype video and screensharing features.
SkypeKit supports Skype Premium features like Group Video and new presenter/moderator features. Skype reports developer-related revenue for the first time to set a baseline.
Skype’s first Microsoft devcon isn’t Skype-only, piggy-backing on other MSDN events. Skype’s devrels team has to earn independent Microsoft developer cred from scratch.
Skype clients:
Skype for Metro, as Skype for Windows gets a dose of Metro chrome.
Skype for Windows gets chat style formatting features from the Mac. Still no rich-text or html browsing and inline objects.
Skype for Mac gets better. The five most awful things about Skype for Mac will be improved. Slightly.
Skype introduces emoji, the emoticons widely used throughout Japan.
Skype for Kindle Fire 2. As Microsoft allies with Amazon.
Qik ends its life as a brand. Skype will finish migrating popular client features to Skype mobile apps and scaling features/services an order of magnitude or two.
Skype for iOS gets better. Major technical and UI overhauls. Injections of Qik experience. Client will finally load a power user in two seconds, ready to chat and call at least as convenient as FaceTime. Skype’s iPhone and iPad apps will go from useful to delightful.
Microsoft Integration:
Internet Explorer. We’ll see further integration with IE. Click-to-Call will continue to highlight phone numbers, making them clickable. New actions will include adding a Skypable link to your Skype contact list, making Facebook contacts clickable, and enabling Facebook video chat. When IE supports WebRTC/RTCweb, Skype will also support browser-based apps.
Windows. Skype for Windows will ship with the consumer build of Windows 8. Unless the lawyers nix it.
Windows Tablet. Skype for Metro works sooo much better than Skype for iPad.
Sharepoint. Unlikely to see synergy in 2012. Perhaps at the user and department directory level?
XBox. Skype for XBox should be Skype’s best living room app, more intuitive than the apps build for televisions if only because it will support game controllers and Kinect and game designers will know what look and feel will work for gamers. (I might buy an XBox for this, maybe even a TV too. Do I need a TV to use an XBox?) Will Skype build the client? Probably they’ll help the Entertainment Division to build their own. Will the XBox teams open an internal design competition to explore a broad solution space? Here’s hoping.
Microsoft Office bundles Skype. Word, Excel and PowerPoint come with Skype extensions, making phone numbers and Skype names clickable.
Outlook and Exchange start Skype interop without third-party apps. Call a contact from within Outlook. Look up workplace contacts in the enterprise directory.
Skype for Bing advertisers. When you buy ads on Bing, you’ll see an option to make your phone number or Skype name clickable. It may be free, since a raft of up-selling opportunities can follow if advertisers and shoppers further adopt click-and-call behavior.
Windows Live Messenger. Messenger will interop with Skype by year end at least as well as Skype does with Facebook. I expect federated presence, IM, voice and video, though maybe not group video. Messenger-Skype will raise non-trivial identity challenges.
SkyDrive. Skype clients will support file transfer and filing using cloud storage services, starting with Microsoft SkyDrive. Send from or save to SkyDrive with your Skype contacts. It’s a fast and cheap MSFT loyalty feature. Will they follow with integration to Box, Dropbox and other popular services?
Presence. Skype needs dramatically better presence and status messaging. Perhaps Microsoft has a service or five that Skype might use to share availability, user profiles, and mood messages?
Lync. Microsoft’s workplace telephony products will be be folded into the Skype division. Work will start in building the Skype stack into their products. Rebranded as Skype.
Skype’s Performance:
US$1 Billion in sales, broken out in MSFT’s form 10-Q coming Thursday, 19 Jan.
$100 million in advertising, ten percent of Skype’s total income. Driven by a mix of click-to-call from browser plug-ins, Bing-driven links, and in-app brand partner messaging.
Falling termination revenue per user (SkypeOut to phone numbers) even as more people use Skype. Dollars per minute continues to fall to zero, even as cost per mobile MB rises.
Skype Premium service revenue grows as small businesses pay for group video conferencing, choosing Skype’s convenience over GoToMeeting’s features, WebEx’s reliability, and Google’s informality.
35 Million Dialtone: Peak concurrent users will top 35 million.
210 Million Monthly Active Users late in 2012.
More than 1200 people work for Skype. Joining Microsoft just increases the need for engineers, product managers, developer relations and marketing communications staff. Skype’s Palo Alto offices overflow, even after a second buildout.
Skype still doesn’t offer emergency services. Seven people die while someone fails to reach police or an ambulance over Skype.
In Skypelandia in 2012:
Tokbox gets first paying customers for new premium video chat APIs.
Google+ lets you record and save video hangouts to YouTube.
The US Congress discusses voting on bills via Skype in an election year.
Schedule your Google Hangouts in Google Calendar.
Apple squares off against Skype as FaceTime expands to every desktop and mobile device.
Apple adds FaceTime to iChat.
Invite people to a Google Hangout in Gmail. And Orkut.
Amazon partners with a VoIP company to offer scalable hosted cloud telephony like Voxeo or Twilio.
A political candidate holds 40 town halls in one week, attending by Skype video. Four of the gatherings have problems with the connection.
Twilio and Voxeo pilot hosted video chat APIs.
#OccupySkype protests local jobs lost to remote work.
25% of all PBXs shipped in the Americas and Europe come with ViPR features turned on, quietly shifting millions of B2B calls from plain old telephone services to VoIP.
Chinese government agencies deploy stronger surveillance- and censor-ware with the TOM-Online version of Skype.
The US Department of Defense further restricts the use of Skype to non-secure networks and communications.
Cisco buys RIM and folds it into the Flip division.
The Chrome browser for desktops and Android will drive 50 million new Google Voice users.
The Vatican’s broadband chokes when a million people try to call after a rumor spreads the Pope’s Skype name.
Google Voice launches in 10 more countries.
A 50th developer deploys Asterisk as a video conferencing switch.
Police negotiator talks with cornered kidnapper over Skype.
2012 runs a whole day longer than 2011, but feels shorter.
A Skype developer showcases a teledildonics product at the January AVN Conference in Las Vegas.
Microsoft declares company-wide support for NSTIC, forcing Skype to create a 21st Century identity system.
Skype dialtone soars when LinkedIn pilots Skype and SkypeOut links in posts and job ads.
The Slow Startup movement earns counterculture credibility as Lean Startup matures.
Google lets you save video Hangouts to YouTube.
AT&T buys capacity piecemeal after the T-Mobile deal died. Lots of small-company consolidation.
Sprint’s mobile infinite bandwidth offer stops at 4G.
Workplace deskphones lose share to iPad apps and docks with handsets.
Anonymous attacks the Skype network.
Cisco ships a Skype appliance for enterprises.
Five of the ten best selling games come with in-game voice conferencing, serving a Billion minutes of talk in 2012, none of those minutes through Skype.
Phil Wolff designs and positions realtime collaboration products for effective people. Phil advises the Personal Data Ecosystem Consortium and is a director of the DataPortability Project. Email editor@skypejournal.com, Skype evanwolf, tweet @evanwolf, G+ or call +1-510-444-8234 to talk with Phil. Skype Journal is independent of Skype.