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Skype Offering SkypeOut Service for Free

Skudd writes "In an effort to boost new customer acquisition, Skype has begun offering its 'SkypeOut' service for free. The free service is slated to last until December 31, 2006." From the article: "While the SkypeOut service will allow free calling to regular phones, the company will continue to charge people to get calls using a service it calls SkypeIn, which costs about $38 for an unlimited 12-month subscription. Consumers can get the service for three months for about $12.80."

11 of 331 comments (clear)

  1. Not For Everyone by Red+Pointy+Tail · · Score: 4, Informative

    Note to submitters/editors: Not everyone lives in US/Canada.

    1. Re:Not For Everyone by asavage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Based on the last location poll, only around 50% are from North America. As that includes Canadians and Mexicans, there are more non-Americans then Americans. It is of course run by Americans and they can do whatever they want.

  2. Looking Forward To... by SlashdotOgre · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm looking forward to calling my current land line provider, AT&T, and tell them I'm switching because of their choice to hand over phone records to the NSA. I'm sure VoIP won't be much more secure, but I hope if enough people do this they get the message.

    --
    Sadly, PS/2 was yet another victim of USB, which doesn't care what you plug into it, the electrical slut.
    1. Re:Looking Forward To... by tapo · · Score: 4, Informative

      By U.S. law, even a disconnected phone line is able to dial 911.

      --
      "Joy is contagious," he said, peering into the microscope.
    2. Re:Looking Forward To... by Baddas · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, most cell towers are on independent power backup. They often have a UPS with an on-site generator.

      Mind you, that's not ALL of them, but enough that the network doesn't go down entirely in disasters.

  3. New partnership? Something else? by Sosarian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Did Skype suddenly form a new partnership with someone to handle these calls?

    Or is this some sort of grab for customers so that they can have more P2P nodes?

    Just some initial thoughts.

  4. Huh. by AWhiteFlame · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just tried calling my cell phone on it from my old Powerbook G4 Ti @ 500 Mhz with OS X Tiger. Works -excellently-. No activation or anything needed to my account. Downloaded latest version, ran it, and it worked right "out of the box".

    --
    "Everything worth innovating today will go to court tomorrow."
  5. Re:The AOL of VOIP by Zemran · · Score: 5, Informative

    For my UK incoming number I use www.sipgate.com
    For my US incoming number I use www.sipphone.com

    For outgoing calls I use www.voipbuster.com (they also offer an incoming number but I already had one)
    www.voipcheap.com or www.voipcheap.co.uk (same stuff really).

    I have a Sipura ATA so I do not even need to have my computer turned on to make or recieve calls. You can get other ATAs and I do not think the Sipura is the best but I bought it 3 years ago when it was.

    BTW I live in northern Thailand and with this I can call and chat to my friends as much as I like.

    --
    I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
  6. Fascinating to me how the economics have ended up by CFD339 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I do a lot of work with Asterisk and have investigated pricing on inbound and outbound rates to such an extent that it would be considered obsessive.

    With most VoIP, inbound call phone numbers are at least as expensive to get as outbound when you get to any kind of volume. I'm not talking about 1 line for a few bucks, or a few test lines at fixed cost, but the ability to just recieve a bunch of calls at once on a phone number. It comes down to about $18 (US) for the ability to recieve each concurrent inbound call. You can get unlimited at a penny or two per minute per call, but that ends up being more expensive if you do good pooling with a fixed number of lines. Outbound can be as little as half that.

    Where is the cost in all this? The cost is the connection to the copper based system. At some point, somewhere, someone has to get paid for a link to that big addressing system.

    The sick part is, most of the big telcos are doing voip any way, and their ability to hold onto that master address space is the key last item for them to hold the power to charge what they do. ENID (including free systems) are functional -- and can work just like DNS -- but the providers wont use it.

    There's a system (ENID based, I believe) that would allow any number you dial from your regular phone or cell phone to be checked against a registry, and if a voip address is listed for it, the telco could bypass the entire infrastructure and route the call directly to the person you called over voip. So if I registered a voip address to my phone number (which I have done) and you called me from say, Verizon Wireless, they could route the call to me without going over a single bit of big telco as anything other than VoIP. No telco switching involved. It would bypass my per-minute inbound costs entirely other than my internet connection.

    It works if you call from a voip phone that knows about the registry (Asterisk based systems, for example can do this). The telcos and cell companies don't do it. Why not? As a whole, they make their money by controlling that master address -- the phone number.

    --
    The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
  7. Skype & Security by Robotech_Master · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just to note, there are a few security concerns about Skype, its ownership by eBay, and potential security holes within the Skype network. Be aware of what you're using when you're using it.

    --
    Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
  8. Nothing new but really nice anyway! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.voipbuster.com/
    http://www.sipdiscount.com/
    http://www.voipcheap.com/
    voipdiscount.com
    voipstunt.com ...

    gives... well... around 40 countries free! (well... you pay 10euros for 2 or 3 months and you can call a lot of countries for 0 cent/min or 1 cent/min)

    I use it a lot (with sjphone) and for this price... this is unbeatable! But for a good VOIP, you need a good High Speed Internet Access! A delay of 1 or 2 seconds and cause a hang up before you can even try to say "hello" ;-)

    sip compatible with any hardware SIP or softphone like sjPhone (mac, pc, linux, pda...)

    sip server: sip.voipbuster.com (port 5060)
    domain: voipbuster.com
    stun server: stun.voipbuster.com

    sip server: sip1.sipdiscount.com (port 5060)
    domain: sipdiscount.com
    stun server: stun.sipdiscount.com

    etc ;-)