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Archive for May, 2006

Yahoo! Messenger: VoIP for 1 cent

Wednesday, May 24th, 2006

What VoIP software do we know? Skype, MSN Messenger and Yahoo! Messenger areYahoo! Messenger among the most popular ones. I have already reviewed the Skype application. Now Yahoo has released a new version of its messenger with Voice. Now you can use it not only for PC-to-PC calling, but for reaching traditional and mobile devices.

The PC-to-phone rates are very cheap starting from 1 cent per minute with the maximum rate being that to Diego Garcia (sounds like a name of a person) - $0.95. The minimum price is lower than Skype used to offer ($0.02) and the list of destinations is impressive. You can see the rates here.

So what do you need to get is a PC, a broadband connection, a headset and download Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Before starting using it, you have to buy a prepaid credit (either $10 or $25), which is easy to do online.

So after you have done all that, you are good to go.

Step 1. From the main window, click the gray touch pad icon to bring up your touch tone dial pad and enter the phone number.

Step 2. In the text box next to the dial pad icon, just type in the number.

Step 3. Remember to include the area code when dialing the number.

Step 4. When you are done with talking, you just press the button “End Call.”

You can get a phone-in number for your PC, so that people can call your PC just like it is a regular phone. For it you go to Phone In, select your country and area code and you got it.

Remember to give the number to your friends and relatives and happy call conference.

Internet telephony, VoIP, Yahoo! Messenger, VoIP software, VoIP providers, Voice over Internet Protocol

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Skype introduces new translation service

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Skype, the leading provider of VoIP calls that boasts of 100 million users worldwide, has expanded its services with a new translation service.

However, it is not the machines that are going to convert the meaning and words from one language into the other. Skype has invited human translators and interpreters to contribute to intercultural communication, which VoIP naturally make possible.

“The interpreter service is being offered in conjunction with Voxeo, a company that provides the background technology hand-off to the interpreters, and Language Line Services, the company that is responsible for providing the actual interpreters,” www.newsfactor.com informs.

When conversing via a Skype application, the users can now request a live interpreter, which will cost them $2.99 per minute.

The service offers translators and interpreters of 150 languages. It is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. On average, it takes about 45 seconds to get switched to it. One needs to have a SkypeOut account to run the service and the billing can go to this account.

The translation service can be useful for face-to-face large-group conferences and meetings. International businessmen sitting at one table and striking a deal have two options of using the Skype interpreters. First they can get connected to the service through the handset and then pass it to each other. The second scenario is that they have to acquire the newly announced Skype-compatible speakerphone.

Probably the service is not going to be the most popular solution, but it can sometimes be resorted to save a deal.

Skype, VoIP, translation service

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Skype offers free landline and mobile calls for US and Canada

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Skypefree.pngWow - that is kind of cool. And that is true. As Skype announced on May 16, now all calls made from PCs using Skype application to landlines or mobile phones are free of charge. If you are not a Skype user yet, all you need to do is to download and install Skype.

Still before calling anyone make sure you have the right people’s cell phone numbers.

Are the calls really free? Yes, they really are: no advance payment, no subscription fees, no nothing. The only two limitations include: the calls are free for those ringing from and to a number within the USA and Canada. Calls to the rest of the regions are still subject to standard rates.

The second limitation is that the offer is unlikely to be sustainable as it will cost the company a pretty penny. The creators promise that the offer will be available till the end of 2006 that is till December 31, 2006.

For the most popular calling destinations SkypeOut Global Rate of € 0.017 per minute is applied. € 0.017 is approximately the same as 0.021 American dollar or 0.012 pounds. These rates are for calling regular phone lines only (see rates to all destination). Phone calls to mobile numbers are usually more expensive.

Skype has taken a decision to cut down fees for landlines and mobile phones in an attempt to grow its North American market, which is a bit slack at the moment. The team is happy to be among the first companies to offer totally free conference.

Skype works on all platforms where SkypeOut is available, which at this time means Windows, Mac, Linux and Pocket PC. PC-to-PC calls continue to be globally free, which means that for the users in the USA and Canada calls made to PCs, traditional phones and mobile ones are 100% free.

Skype has outrun its VoIP rivals that include MSN Messenger and Yahoo Messenger, and services such as Vonage that offer outbound phone calls at a fee.

Skype, SkypeOut, free calls, free landline calls, free mobile calls, VoIP, PC-to-PC calls

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