This article will help you to understand the
phone services and solutions offered by Skype:
Skype's the limit: with better quality and features,
Skype takes VoIP to a new level
by Mike Hogan
THE MATH IS mind-boggling: Two years plus
200 million downloads of Skype's voice client equals 60 million registered
users. Like Pre-Google search engines, PC-to-PC phone calling had been
around for years, but was headed nowhere in particular before Skype (www.skype.com).
Today, new features make Skype ready to handle your business calls--and much
more.
Version 1.4 of Skype's tiny voice applet achieves
better-than-landline call quality and adds free call forwarding--a critical
feature for business callers, who make up a quarter of all Skype users. You
don't have to be logged in to a computer anymore, either: Just have your
incoming Skype calls ring on any three landlines or mobile phones
simultaneously.
Of course, off-internet calls aren't free; you'll need a SkypeOut account.
This calling card-like service lets you call anyone in North America,
Australia or Europe for about 2 cents a minute, and most other countries for
less than a quarter a minute.
The new Skype Groups lets you equip an entire office with phone service and
manage all your workstations and call logs over the web using a single
business account. For anyone uncomfortable with a $10 headset, new Skype
phones like the $100 Linksys CIT200 (www.linksys. com) can deliver that
old-fashioned telephone experience.
Skype also has new ways you can provide toll-free access to distant
employees, customers and partners. For $35 a year, SkypeIn will give you a
local phone number with free voice mail in any area code in the world. Add
Skype's free links to your web pages or Outlook e-mail, and your Skype-equipped
customers could be calling your sales or support lines with a mouse click.
Up to four conferees can participate in voice or IM exchanges, transfer
files or engage in extended chats. By the time you read this, Skype will
have also added video-conferencing.
Skype is working with other developers to add these features to search
engines and other software, and its merger with eBay could eventually bring
another 225 million eBay and PayPal customers into its user base.
VoIP isn't just about cheap phone calls anymore. There's a whole new menu.
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