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100 million reasons to use Skype
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
One reason not to use Skype:
I dont know any of thoes 100 milion people. (Plus my wife's eployer payes for my cell phone) :) |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
One of my colleagues loves Skype, and was so excited for it to arrive on the N800. For him, and people like him, Skype was a selling point.
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
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The transcript of that talk includes this: In almost any comparison you can think of, if there are two competing technologies, one of which has visible benefits from network effects, and the other of which doesn't, the one with the visible benefits from network effects is the one that's going to win. This is not inherently evil; it's also not inherently good. It does have unambiguous benefits. The network effect provides the payoff which helps induce us as a society to make choices when we need to.If Skype has 20 times as many users as Google Talk or Gizmo, it's way more than 20 times as useful to, um, use it. I can't think of any economic analysis that indicates rationale choice of benefits is lemming-like. Perhaps you're mistaking me for one of those guys who camped out for 24 hours in order to buy an iPhone and two-year AT&T contract. :rolleyes: |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
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When you look at the feature-set of Skype, there is nothing noteworthy that sets it above other VoIP offerings. I have used / currently use many different VoIP systems including XMPP based using open codec (Gtalk), SIP-based using open codec (Gizmo, Ekiga, Wengophone), SIP-based using open codecs but walled garden (Vonage), proprietary protocol/codec mesh system (Skype) and mixed proprietary protocol/open codecs (Teamspeak). I can honestly say there is nothing compelling about Skype when compared to these others. It is pretty much middle of the road. There are a number of things that make it less favourable in some respects including its "Walled Garden" community and its proprietary protocol/codec usage. People who ignore these things do not know the history of the traditional phone system and the mess it was at the beginning. Interoperability and choice of provider are good things. |
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
For me, Skype is a pervasive reason to upgrade to the N800 from my 770. I have plenty of business contacts and I've paid for the full year outgoing for 14.95 - before the February '07 deadline in the US when it went up to 29.95 - and I rarely remember to use it because I'm starting to hate to lug around my laptop.
Skype on my internet tablet is reason enough. Sadly, it means that I'm going to have to pay through the nose for it - Nokia will get my money twice it seems. |
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As for the invocation of Metcalfe's Law, consider that Skype has ADDED to the connection possibilities. Their network restrictions take nothing away from that. So in addition to the number of Gizmo and Googletalk users, we just added another 100 million more potential N800 customers (taking the expression literally for sake of this point). And if you're one day out of their network, so what? Your contacts don't suddenly die. You utilize a competing means of reaching them. I'm not sure why you're getting that worked up anyway... :confused: |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
One good thing about lemmings -- they don't have to worry about dying alone :)
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Most social creatures don't die alone.
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"100 million reasons to use Skype"
"XXX million reasons to like war" War is good because XXX million people voted president butch and he likes war (i have to guess). Another possibility would be that sometimes people get dragged into something they later regret. |
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When I personally think of some soon-to-be Skype-users as lemmings its because I cant help the feeling they never even think of any of those economic, rational points. There's one single criterion for them: If all the others have it, it must be good. Period. They don't know the alternatives nor do they care to learn. They don't really know if any of their friends uses Skype or anything else - they tend to check this afterwards. All they have to base their decisions on is that Skype happens to be in the media so often and everyone talks about it. (Of course, some make they choice considering most of the points given above and maybe even more; if they choose Skype then, there's no reason calling them lemmings :D ) Another thing that comes into play here and that cannot be measured on an economic scale is the moral aspect. People want to be good. They separate waste, they donate, they help young mothers with strollers climb the stairs... yes, they do. Some of us realize that proprietary technologies like Skype (Flash, *.doc-Files, ...) are as bad as pollution and simply refuse to support them for this one reason, even if it might contradict their own economic interests. There are people who refuse to share MP3 files and insist on OGG vorbis instead. And there are those who refuse to register with Skype and insist the other person registers with a SIP or jabber/Jingle based account. Putting all this together, I think the "network effect" is simply overestimated. For the lemmings, its not the network that counts but Skypes PR in the media. And for all the ohers, there's so many things to consider that the network effect is just one of many. |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Careful with the rank assumptions about other users, Benny. ;)
And even if your speculation is correct, so what? So there are people who buy because a friend does... and? This is nothing new. Do they represent the majority? Who knows? Who cares! What I find interesting in your rebuttal benny is that you want to discredit Roger's definition of the (technical) network effect, using as your rationale a social network effect. Hey, at the end of the day, a network is a network is a network. ;) Again, the rebuttals to Roger's argument are, in my estimation, going far afield of where he intended. It's a VOIP client, folks. It enjoys a lot of users. The N800 can now jack into that group. And the problem is... what? |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Texrat, I try not to make assumptions. I write down what I experience around me with people I know. (Sure, there's always things you mostly interpret, like motives...)
Speaking about interpretation: When I read the article I understood the "network effect" was primarily a social effect, having technical consequences. What I found most interesting was the following part: Quote:
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
I still don't see any problem.
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
@Tex:
Lucky you :D One day we'll meet IRL and I'll explain to you in detail all thats bad and evil in this world. Sounds good to you? ;) |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
No thanks. I'm struggling to become Mary Poppins and don't need the disteractions. :p
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
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I know that everyone can switch to something else but have you ever tried to get someone to switch to something new and unknown (and even possibly better) after they have gotten used to something? It is not easy. There is a great deal of inertia to overcome. It is best to have them not lock themselves into a service where they have no service provider alternatives later. Quote:
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Just as I misunderstood you, you seem to have misunderstood me. With responses 3 and 4, you're extrapolating ideas that weren't in my comments. I'm not up to making this a huge tete-a-tete (:D) but I apologize if I didn't make myself clear. Suffice to say I did not mean to imply anything that led to those responses.
As for "worked up", that wasn't meant as an accusation or anything derogatory... I'm saying it appears to me you put more work into deconstructing and analyzing the article than the points made merited. ;) |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
i'm 4 of those 100million "users". i've used skype about 3 times since free calling to US/Canadian numbers was ended.
An open-source SIP client would allow the tablet to be used as a voip phone connected to asterisk or to a voip service. It would be incredibly useful. Did Tapioca SIP and minisip both give up? Why do these projects keep stalling? bad luck, high level of difficulty, or disincentives? |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
You guys are funny...
I personally have no use for skype... But more poower to thoes who do! |
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Skype is propriertary software. Propriertary software is antisocial. One telephone that only calls to others same brand phones is antisocial. Nokia that only calls to Nokia? Motorola that only calls to Motorola? This post is wrong because have the idea that Skype is social.
«Eat **** 8000000000000000 Fly's can't be wrong» |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
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It's too easy to say Skype "doesnt take away anything, it only adds a new option". This would be like saying giant shopping malls outside the cities didn't take away anything, they just added new possibilities. The truth is: They caused small downtown-shops to close down and took away the possibility to shop locally, the possibility to choose. (Same goes for Microsoft and its de facto monopoly on the desktop.) Skype isn't just another option. Skype on the N800, for example, makes it less attractive for people to invest in open VoIP clients for the device, because in some way, VoIP is there for most people. So it does take away the option to choose - again. It's a very libertarian thing to think of new players in the market as "new options" only. In fact many of them in the long run mean less options than before. There is such a thing as a moral aspect to it. Yes, there is. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious! :D |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Benny, I'd buy your argument if and only if any of those 100 millions Skype users were taken from other alternatives. In the case we're talking about, they were not. They already exist. My point was that they represent potential new N800 users. Will that potential be fully realized? I'm not that naive. :D But, again, I was specifically addressing potential alone. Ironically, that also goes for your comment about Skype taking away the option to use: it CAN, but won't necessarily do it.
Nokia still intends to provide open SIP. That alone undermines Skype's potential to be the Wal-Mart of N800 voip. Potentially. ;) |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
I prefer free, open software. But the fact is that if you ask 'internet phone' to random computer users everywhere then chance is that 'Skype' is their reply - or else they're not familiar with making calls over the internet at all. So, getting Skype on the N800 was good for that reason - large contacts list, and contacts in other companies on the other side of the world are also familiar with it. Besides, Skype _does_ have some other features that most alternatives don't: 1) More countries are included for landcalls. 2) Cheap calls (this is also the case for some of the alternatives, but 1) is more often than not enough that it doesn't help). And 3) Penetrates well in firewall environments.
I really would like to have an open source version instead of course. Skype had the most stupid 'missing close when disconnect' bug for half a year (in the linux version), which would have been easy to fix if it was open (instead we had to resort to pre-loading a patched C runtime lib. with hacked functionality). And now that it's been fixed, it's only in a new version with terrible user interface (the old one was good. This is the layout in the N800 version, btw.) |
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From my point of view it doesn't matter where those 100 millions came from. The fact that there are 100 millions means that there's an emerging monopoly which I should do my best to fight. So there's 100 million reasons not to use Skype. I really can't see why it should matter if the users were taken from other alternatives. See what happened with MS Windows? Most Windows users never had a different OS before, still each of them helps creating a hostile environment for the users of other platforms. What they call "choice" then is "well, you can still switch to Windows if you dont like the incompatibilities". Well... I'm not saying Skype shouldn't be on the N800. I'm not saying people shouldn't use it. All I say is theres good reason not to use it (in fact, 100 million reasons) and one might want to think about it before installing it. What if everybody used it? Would you like that? I certainly wouldn't. I prefer competition. And competition can only live through open standards. Quote:
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Ok you win. :p
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Word from Skype marketing: The total number of registered users is now over 196 million. At any given moment, you can see how many users are online, which has been around the nine million mark.
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Just 1 reason to use Skype, but that is enough.
I have a completely different reason to be happy about Skype being ported to the N800: Skype works.
I suppose that most of you live in the US, and use the sip either at home or on Internet cafe. Under those conditions indeed sip works and is a better choice than skype. Under other conditions, the view is quite different. For example, I have travelled in Asia, Australia and New Zealand lately. I thought I could use gizmo to phone back home on decent rate (just wifi access fees). SIP is blocked in most hotspots. Purposefully. Wouldn't your know it: most hotspots in tourist places have been bought by telcos, and grouped in networks. And telcos don't like free competition... For example in New Zealand: you can get a card to use wifi in hotspots all around the country from NZ telecom. Not really cheap, but much cheaper than cellphone roaming charges. Except that you can't phone using SIP, because NZ telecom won't let you. And good luck trying to find an hotspot you could use outside of Auckland which is not operated by NZ telecom. Hotels with wifi access are coming to the same conclusion: let people use their room phone instead. In all fairness, I sould say that if more than one customer starts to use SIP on the hotel router, things won't work very well. Anyway: bye, bye SIP. It's not only NZ, you'll find the same story everywhere. For example, I live in Germany. T-online bought about all start-up wifi networks two years ago. Only Vodafone has a decent competing network. Both are telcos, say bye bye to sip. Skype works, and the reason it is not that easilly blocked is because the protocol is secret, of course. It's trivial to block an open protocol. As much as I like open source, I have to realise that this is a weakness here. Now, talk about phoning at home, on you own router. Wouldn't you know it? Telcos have understood that SIP is competition, and they've found a very creative way to kill it. For example in France, everyone knowadays uses a "freebox". It's a wifi router you get from orange (ex France telecom). It comes with an "internet phone". Looks like a good offer. Except that this "internet phone" is SIP, and orange won't let other SIP networks call their SIP phone for free. Except that this "internet phone" is SIP, and grabs the SIP ports (of course). Try to use SIP on a computer connected to the router, and it won't work (of course). It could work, if you are computer literate enough to let your SIP client use non-standard ports and to configure the router firewall accordingly. Most people don't know how to do that. Skype does that automatically. Nokia had a brilliant idea with the 770 originally: make a wifi phone, using SIP. Except that roaming with SIP is less and less possible. Now they try Skype. I can understand that. |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Wow, interesting.
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Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
@Jerome: A very good summary of the situation.
What's really needed here is that we all start to push harder for network neutrality, that's not only about charging differently for different services, what's really important is to get written in stone that it's illegal to cut off competition. Which is, in fact, illegal in many other segments. If telecoms can't be neutral then they should not be allowed to own any network services, they should only be allowed to own the physical infrastructure. Cables. Not what's running on them. In other words, "behave, or..!" |
Re: Just 1 reason to use Skype, but that is enough.
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It is a good thing that the owner of a network has control over what's happening. He is legally responsible (in most countries) and he wants to provide a certain user experience for all of his users. Now if you build a hotspot for your customers to surf the web and read their mails, you need to calculate the amount of bandwidth you'll typically need for all of them to surf at a decent speed. Good. Now one of these customers tunnels his filesharing traffic over port 80, uses Skype and does a number of other things the network wasn't designed for... As long as it's one customer, it'll probably go unnoticed (except that there might be legal implications). But if everyone does it, you'll run into troubles. My experience is that many hotspots don't block SIP for the reason that they don't want VoIP. They simply block everything thats not needed for surfing and mailing. I usually can't chat (IRC), can't do filesharing, can't use instant messaging .... So I don't believe you can't do SIP because they want to block VoIP. If they really, really wanted to block all kinds of VoIP, they'd have to start with Skype simply because it's popular (there are ways to do this, although its more complex than blocking a port). So the bottom line is that with Skype "works everywhere" translates to "abuses network infrastructure". I wouldn't dare to sell this as a good thing, let alone as an advantage. |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
I can't stress fully how much I disagree with benny1967. It's turning the whole thing upside down. If the transport layer (which is what the hotspot or other AP is laying down) should start sensoring all the traffic then where should it stop? It's like a road. You can't and you shan't try to keep control over what's transported, but you can impose speed (bandwidth) limits: Add speedbumps where deemed necessary.
And as for blocking SIP: There's no doubt that when telcos block SIP it's because it's a competitor, not because of bandwidth, legal issues or anything else. It's about killing competition, full stop. There have been enough actual cases described in the media the last year to support this conclusion. |
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Even if the legal situation might be different in other countries, it's still my hotspot. I can do whatever I want. I can block the whole web except bible-related sites. I can make it available only for email an block http completely. Whatever I want - or whatever I need to do (an increasing number of access points have to follow corporate security guidlines; their admins hate Skype for what it forces them to do). Quote:
Oh, and speaking of competition or "killing competition": If this is your concern, don't use Skype. Skype kills competition. |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
That last paragraph just shows that you don't really get it. Skype competes with their _product_, while telcos that blocks SIP (or other VoIP. Really. This has been in the press _everywhere_!) cuts competition by removing competitor's access. Telcos that do this don't _want_ to compete. This is in fact against the law in some countries (if they can't keep their roles apart they are not allowed to mix them), and should be in more.
EDIT: Note that I'm talking about publicly provided networks, if you want to provide some free access to passers-by from your home network then by all means you have the right to block anything you want. |
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Have a nice day. If you have a N800, enjoy Skype... it's ab Benny1967-free zone. ;) |
Re: 100 million reasons to use Skype
Sorry about the 'don't get it', btw. Bad wording on my part, pls. ignore everything before 'Skype competes with..'. My point was the two strategies, as you say, and indeed I (and some lawmakers some places, fortunately) consider the 'cut off' strategy illegal and unfair.
As for enjoying Skype.. I'll do my best! :) As I've said elsewhere I would still have preferred an open Skype if that could be possible. If the SIP-blocking and all that disappeared we could all concentrate on getting the best open products on the market. |
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