SKYPE is as dead as Hotmail now that Microsoft put its hands on it. If Microsoft is driven by Google envy and Googlephobia (Google enters the voice communications market), then it will end up no better than against GMail. See what Microsoft did to Hotmail after it had bought its way into the market.
Kim Cameron, a Microsoft Distinguished Engineer and Chief Architect of Identity, left Microsoft as of May 4, according to my contacts.
But when Microsoft yanked the Bing and Office accounts from JWT barely three weeks into new Chief Marketing Officer Chris Capossela's tenure -- and while longtime CMO Mich Mathews is transitioning her way out -- the speed of the shift prompted questions about what was behind the move, coming at critical time for the tech giant's consumer-marketing initiatives.
Comments
dyfet
2011-05-11 03:41:58
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2011-05-11 07:19:20
Agent_Smith
2011-05-11 03:42:19
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2011-05-12 10:36:27
twitter
2011-05-12 21:29:47
Skype was the only VOIP that I was able to set up easily for gnu/linux two years ago. Anything that runs on Windows is only as reliable as Windows itself, which all major cell phone carriers have rejected.
The patent issue is extremely important for video and VOIP and shows the harm done by software patents. Because of patent problems, it took all the way to November of 2008 to get a stable release of a free video codec up to the task. Non free software allies immediately claimed they would form a coalition to sue users for patent violations. This is outrageous.
Microsoft's purchase of Skype takes away the best working and most popular VOIP outside of Windows, as all others are suppressed by lawsuits. Looking back, I see that Skype themselves were under lawsuit attack. How can that not be an anti-trust violation? They failed to ruin Skype so they bought them out.
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2011-05-12 21:40:55
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/TECH/web/05/11/google.skype.wired/index.html
Adrian Malacoda
2011-05-11 04:42:12
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2011-05-11 07:22:17
twitter
2011-05-11 17:39:41
Baring real justice, we have to hope that Microsoft does to Skype what they did to Hotmail, etc. If they don't ruin it, they can screw free software alternatives with legal and technical attacks. Free software projects face the same extortion threat Skype did but worse because Microsoft now owns skype and can pretend to be an innovator even if they only deliver a fraction of what Skype already offers. If Microsoft does not destroy Skype, the public might not care so much. "Why do you care? VideoPhone (TM) is part of Windows, just buy a new PC and you will have it."
Agent_Smith
2011-05-12 00:33:35
dyfet
2011-05-12 09:42:36
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2011-05-12 10:33:45
dyfet
2011-05-12 23:13:41
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2011-05-12 23:24:45