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Home » Software

Skype for Mass-Market Mobile Phones

Posted by Jack Cook on April 25, 2008 – 8:51 am  Share
closeThis post was published 1 year 6 months 29 days ago.
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I use Skype all the time and find it very reliable in my day to day calls.  Having it on my device will be a huge advantage for some of the calls I make.  At this point in time, the devices that are supported are limited and one can only hope that Skype will make this beta version available for Windows Mobile devices soon.

skype

Following recent moves to extend Skype conversations to a wide variety of new mobile and wireless devices, Skype is taking another major step as it continues to merge its internet communications software with mobile phones. Today, the company released a beta version of Skype for your mobile, a mobile “thin“ client that works on about 50 of the most popular Java-enabled mobile phones from Motorola, Nokia, Samsung and Sony Ericsson.

The beta version of Skype for your mobile is available worldwide with a feature set that includes chat, group chat, presence (seeing when your contacts are online), and receiving calls from Skype users, and through SkypeIn.* Additional features, which include the making of Skype-to-Skype and SkypeOut calls from the mobile handsets, are initially supported in seven markets: Brazil (Rio de Janeiro), Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Poland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.

“These are still the early days for making Skype calls on mobile phones, but we’ve already made great strides in this space,” said Gareth O’Loughlin, general manager, mobile and hardware devices. “Among other things, we have a great relationship with 3, the mobile operator, which has brought the mobile Skype experience to eight markets through the 3 Skypephone and a range of other packages and phones. Skype for your mobile will expand the available options even further.

“While Skype for your mobile is in beta,“ O’Loughlin added, “it is an important time for us to listen to our users‘ feedback, be it through surveys or user forums. We need to hear what delights them and where there is still work to be done. But this product underscores our commitment to innovation and to putting Skype conversations in the pockets of today’s mobile masses.”

With its beta version, Skype for your mobile enters a public testing phase that will help Skype gauge the response of technology-savvy users whose feedback will help tweak the offering. This phase is expected to last several months, after which a public version of the application will be made available to millions of mobile phone owners around the world.

There are two ways to get the beta version of Skype for your mobile: as a direct over-the-air download to a compatible mobile phone, or it can be downloaded to a computer and then transferred to the phone. For instructions, please visit www.skype.com/go/mobiledownload. This Web page also includes a directory of currently supported mobile phones and the list of markets where the full feature set is available. Additional phones and markets will be added over time.

* You will not incur charges from Skype to call or chat with friends on Skype. Skype will charge its regular very low SkypeOut rates when you call friends who are not on Skype or receive calls in your mobile handset from other Skype users or over SkypeIn. 
When you call Skype-to-Skype or SkypeOut from your mobile, you are using mobile voice and data networks for which your mobile operator charges you for data usage and local mobile calling minutes. We highly recommend getting an unlimited data plan to use with Skype for your mobile. The mobile data network is used to sign onto Skype and to download your contacts, update presence and send/receive instant messages – so the longer you stay signed on, the more Skype contacts you have or the more you chat with another Skype user, the more you will use your mobile data plan. 

To keep the application lightweight, Skype for your mobile works over standard mobile voice networks connections for the first and/or last legs of Skype, SkypeOut and SkypeIn calls – and over the internet for the rest.

Users in ‘3’ territories can already get free end-to-end Skype calling and chat on the 3 Skypephone and end-to-end Skype calling at no extra cost on all compatible contract phones from the ‘3’ mobile operator, as part of their subscription. For more information, please visit www.3skypephone.com.

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  • mharxx
    Grrrr I caN'T even use skype on my phone!!! W890i!!!
  • Pyy
    me too, why writte: skype needs permission to use your data connection to continue ???
  • Jimmy
    Why my mobile skype writes me when i want 2 connect i writed my acc name & password ant mob.phone and it vrites me (skype needs permission to use your data connection to continue)
  • I am aware that Skype has been available for Windows Mobile and I have tried it but it does not perform that well in my experience. The latest update for the Windows Mobile beta was in November, 2007.

    When I saw this announcement it seemed to me that there may well be some new features incorporated and features that we would like to see on the the next Windows Mobile release. So I decided to contact Skype to see if in fact there are differences and here is what they told me:

    Skype for Windows Mobile uses only the Internet to access Skype, just like Skype on your PC. So if you have a powerful Windows Mobile device and access to a very strong data connection – like Wifi - then you can benefit from free Skype calling and chat.

    Skype for your mobile is built for all the phones which may not have the power or strong data connection to have an all-Internet experience.

    So Skype for Windows Mobile enables free Skype calling within Wifi range, while Skype for your mobile offers total mobility and access to Skype friends anywhere, but with some costs.


    I thought there was enough to hope that we will see some of this on the next Skype for Windows Mobile release.

    As an aside, I use Skype almost everyday on my PC and have had nothing other than great experiences making calls to landlines in Canada and the US. My hope is that we will see a progression of the quality we experience on our PCs transfer to our Windows Mobile devices. With this new beta release and the improvements it is showing for the java based phones, one can only hope we will see those improvements on the next Windows Mobile Skype release.
  • You need to look harder.

    Skype is indeed available for Windows Mobile (has been for some time) and whilst there are limitations due to the way Windows Mobile interacts with the actual phone hardware on the device, it does work well and as I am sure you know, with many WM phones having WiFi, the options are wide open.
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