1/2/09

Transformational Event for VoX, Mobile VoIP?

Foolhardy as it might sound, some contestants in the communications business – generally the best-capitalized and largest – are going to emerge from any possible industry downturn stronger than they went in, while others are going to disappear.

But massive industry stress, should it occur, sometimes allows upstarts to surge. Think about Google, pre-crash and post-crash. Add eBay, Amazon.com or Yahoo. All emerged from the crash of the Internet bubble in strategically different positions than they held going into the crash.

VoX Communications, a VoIP wholesaler, thinks it might be one of the upstarts to benefit, but in this case not so much from liquidity protection as possibly-explosive new distribution.

What VoX says is that has a contract to supply wholesale VoIP services to privately-held Unified Technologies Group, with a renewable "take-or-pay" obligation for at least 50,000 lines in the first year of service. While that's good, you might say, why is it transformative?

"Our commitment to VoX is a fraction of the number of wholesale lines we expect to deliver," says Ben Piilani, UTGI CEO. "With over 100 distributors already committed to over 500,000 lines in the first year, we could easily exceed one million lines in year one, and we are targeting five million lines by the end of the second year."

For a company such as VoX, what the 50,000 take-or-pay minimum commitment means is that it will earn as much revenue in a month as it now does in a year. For a smaller company, an order of magnitude increase in revenue from a single customer would be a big enough deal.

So imagine the impact of a possible two to three orders of magnitude (100 to 1,000 times) shift in revenue.

Some readers will be skeptical. Consumer VoIP is a really-tough business. So here's the twist. VoX can provide IP telephone services over a cell phone network.

"We have a signed agreement that allows our IP telephone service to transmit over a GSM network, which is the most popular standard for mobile phones around the world," the company says in its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

"We believe one of the most expensive telephone calls a cell phone user can make today is a call to an international destination," VoX says. So there's the twist. VoX might be a VoIP wholesaler, but it is going to become—by default if not by design—a significant provider of mobile VoIP, with a likely emphasis on the use of mobile VoIP for significant international traffic, which represents more revenue per minute of use.

Put simply, here's the potential: VoX says it is "the first to provide VoIP-enabled service to mobile phone customers across the United States on a tier one cellular carrier network."

Specifically, and without naming the carrier, VoX says it "will provide its high-quality digital voice service to UTGI's customer base over one of the top-tier mobile networks in the U.S." The top four providers include Verizon and Sprint, running CDMA networks, and AT&T and T-Mobile, running GSM networks.

We can eliminate Verizon and Sprint. So UTGI has a carriage deal of some sort—mobile virtual network operator, perhaps—with either T-Mobile or AT&T. We can assume neither carrier would be too happy having its name linked to any such mobile VoIP retail effort, which is why nobody will be talking about the actual carrier involved.

Here's why: voice revenues are the mainstay of the entire global mobile business. About 80 percent of all mobile service provider revenue comes from voice. As fast as "data" revenues are growing, VoIP has the clear potential to destroy mobile voice margin, or sales volume, or both.

In essence, VoIP poses the same threat to the legacy wireless business model as it does to the legacy wireline business model.

As outlined by Mark Richards, VoX Communications CIO and founder, the service will not require use of conventional "voice" bandwidth, and will operate exclusively in the "data channel."

From the point of view of the wholesale mobile carrier, the distribution deal essentially looks like a partner selling retail data card or dongle service; a mobile data network, you might say.

You can make your own guesses as to the identity of the mobile carrier. Simple logic would suggest, however, that the greatest incentive lies with the smallest of the four U.S. mobile providers, which has the most to gain, and which is significantly behind the larger three providers in market share.

Even so, you might argue, mobile is a tough business. So here's an angle. Think of the UTGI service as a mobile long distance product.

"For a flat monthly subscription rate from UTGI, mobile VoIP users can call anywhere in the world," says Ron Harden, executive vice president sales and marketing at VoX. And here's the other twist: the way the service will operate, it will not make a difference which country a user calls from. A call to Western Europe from the United States, or a call from France to the United States will cost exactly the same.

UTGI will launch two plans initially, one for domestic calling within the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, and the other to include a large bundle of international minutes at no charge, Richards says.

And make no mistake: global calling is likely going to be the draw here. Richards projects that "per-line wholesale revenue for VoX should exceed $40 per line when the projected domestic and international usage, and ancillary charges, are taken in total." 

None of the partners yet have said anything about handsets. But one can assume it will be a smart phone of some sort, as it will operate exclusively on the data channel, and will have to handle some processing chores.

Depending on the range of services UTGI thinks it might want to add later, some choices would have to be made about whether to run on EDGE, 3G, or both networks. If the mobile provider is AT&T, the handset operating system will more likely be Windows Mobile. If it is T-Mobile, one might expect either Windows or perhaps even Android or Linux.

None of those choices likely will appeal to potential users all that much. And as much as a flat-rate domestic U.S. plan in the range of $80, perhaps, might appeal to some users, the real draw, in our estimation, is the user who needs to call, or travel to, Europe or other destinations where 3G networks are prevalent.

And that, ultimately, is what might be important here: VoX might become the first mobile VoIP provider with major distribution on a quality-assured network (not running "over the top"), with a big global roaming capability. Transformational? Indeed. IP

v

The 411 on International VoIP

Welcome to the first in a series of articles focusing on the issues and opportunities in the international call termination business for VoIP providers. This introductory article outlines the challenges of international VoIP termination and the driving growth of mobile operators and VoIP service providers. In future articles, I will identify the revenue and service opportunities in VoIP international call termination, and the accompanying difficulties and potential solutions.

- Today's Landscape: The Growth and Challenges of International VoIP Termination

The growing adoption of VoIP has introduced many technical and business challenges as well as growth opportunities for telecommunications providers. VoIP makes it very easy and inexpensive to interconnect between carriers, compared to the assignment of fixed TDM ports and circuits. As a result, the industry has evolved from an environment where there was one or two wholesale carriers involved in the termination of a call, to today's environment where there may be four or five players. This adds complexity and cost to call routing and can expose companies to potential fraud through relatively easy manipulation of signaling of a VoIP call. Yet, with all its challenges, this new VoIP landscape can also provide opportunities for telecommunications companies to reach new markets, expand their service offerings and increase their margins.

- The Advent & Growth of Cell Phone Operators

Since the early days of international calling, the receiving carrier would specify a rate to terminate calls to its country. As new mobile operators entered the marketplace, the country, or market, was split between the fixed line numbers and the mobile numbers. These markets were defined by international calling codes, and the terminating carrier would define UK Mobile, for example, as a series of codes that together constitute all the code ranges assigned to the mobile operators in the country. In most countries, fixed lines (or Proper lines) were defined by the difference between the country code (i.e. 44) and the Mobile codes. There was little attempt to define all the various codes that fully define the fixed line destinations in that country. Over time, the mobile markets were split into the specific mobile operators (because of price differences between them), but, apart from sometimes splitting out a major city in the country, the Proper markets have not evolved. The growth of mobile operators with higher priced termination and higher portability levels is an issue that wholesale VoIP-based carriers need to tackle.

In the mobile space, where call termination costs are high and maintained through regulatory ruling, another change has occurred. Many of the original mobile networks have grown significantly; as a result, the Regulator has reduced the cost of termination to reflect the economies of scale. However, the newer 3G networks require a massive investment to provide country-wide coverage, and so the Regulator has allowed a much higher termination rate to those operators. The independent operators are competing for business in an environment where most consumers already subscribe to mobile phone service. Most of Europe has legislated and encouraged number portability to enable competitive carriers to compete with PTT's on equal footing, so the majority of subscribers on the new 3G networks, with their expensive termination rates, actually have individual telephone numbers that originally were assigned to the lower cost incumbent operators.

- And Then There Were VoIP Players

Competition for fixed lines, most recently in the form of VoIP-based service providers, has added another significant complication. In many countries, the Regulator has supported the rise of competitive carriers by allowing a higher termination rate to their customers compared to the norm for the original PTT. In Belgium, Germany, France, Poland and others, a call to a competitive service provider costs the carriers more than a call to a customer of the PTT. Overlaying portability on this more complex structure adds yet another problem and/or opportunity that fast-moving VoIP players are able to address. This area also lends itself to peering opportunities – again, to be covered in a future article.

- Termination: Challenges and Opportunities

International carriers have long bought and sold with one another based on simplicity and blends rather than complexity. For example, if there is only a small percentage of calls to the expensive mobile numbers, or a small number of calls ported to the expensive destination, then a blend slightly higher than the PTT rate is an easy answer. As competition evolves towards higher percentages of portability and competitive carrier customers, the risk associated with blending increases substantially.

This is just a taste of the topics to be covered in coming articles. Each one will tackle a particular issue and identify solutions and opportunities for fast moving players in this competitive industry. IP

Steve Heap is chief technology officer for Arbinet. He can be reached at
sheap@arbinet.com.


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Finally, Fring makes it to appstore

After a long wait, finally fring makes it to the app store . Fring is one of the most popular Mobile VoIP applications. They fit in both as a Mobile VoIP and Mobile VoIM applications. I like the skype calling from fring applications. Apart from skype, Fring also lets supports other third party IM servers like MSN, GoogleTalk, AIM, Yahoo.


Check out the video:



Voice calls are still routed via WIFI and not 3G/GPRS network. This is a big NO NO from apple. I'm sure operators would do anything to block applications from using their 3G network for voice calls. Frings user guide mentions that "Currently it is not possible to make VoIP calls over 3G/GPRS networks ". Couple of months back, I had written an article on Mobile VoIP and who will win? . Frings iPhone user guide has more information about different features and usage.

Congratulations to fring for making it to the appstore. Folks go-ahead and download this app on your iPhone and enjoy fringing!

 

Phil Wolff's 26 incriminating 2009 Skype Predictions

Last year's Jim Courtney's 2008 predictions and mine
Oakland California's local fortune cookie factoryIn 2009:

  1. MacWorld sucks without Steve Jobs.
  2. Steve Jobs steps down as Apple CEO.
  3. Skype brings back Skypecasts with a new feature: with one click, introduce spammers, con artists, and sexy webcam girls to each other.
  4. Skype for Neocortex. Mood based on serotonin levels. Very high quality audio and video by tapping directly into the optic nerve and auditory system. Some side effects.
  5. Skype for Lovers. Extension of Skype 4.1. Just one buddy to dial. No interruptions. Ultrasimple UI: click the heart.
  6. Skype's new platforms have more active developers than BT Ribbit. More than Google Android. Fewer than Apple iPhone.
  7. Litigation. 1530 sleep deprived patients sue Skype for keeping them up late.
  8. Google Central will be exciting.
  9. Google Video Talk adds multiparty video.
  10. The Emerging Communications Conference (eComm) will sell out.
  11. Yahoo! fires thousands of people. Decimates the messenger team. Hires a new executive team. Reorganizes. Again.
  12. Skype introduces multiparty video. The kids love it. WebEx hates it.
  13. Skype for Asterisk gets video call support. Dating sites love it.
  14. Skype for WoW builds on Skype for Asterisk. The raiders love it. 
  15. Skypephone comes to the Americas via partnership with with US mobile carriers. Wal-Mart will carry it. Nothing for Canada.
  16. 3 INQ1 sales will cut into 3 Skypephone sales in the UK.
  17. U.S. Mobile Carterfone rules (to free mobile phones from carrier contracts) will be considered by the FCC.
  18. VoIP falls from telecom jargon. Even VoIP bloggers stop using the term. The public starts using Skype as a generic name for internet talk.
  19. eBay's auction businesses will do well in tough times, better in the second half of the year.
  20. Skype will make $630 million in FY2009.
  21. Peak Skype usage will top 18 million simultaneous users.
  22. Skype will serve 23 billion minutes in 2009Q4.
  23. Skype scores product placements in:
  24. Skype issues new krypto since its old cryptographic source code escaped from TOM-Skype control
  25. Skype Video for Mobile. Skype buys a streaming video service for smart mobile camera phones.
  26. China approves SkypeIn and SkypeOut.

 

Skype product placement: Who Wants to be a Millionaire (US)

"Millionaire has teamed up with Skype for "Ask The Expert," one of our most fun and innovativeSkype product placement - Who Wants to be a Millionaire? lifelines!"

From an August 2008 ABC press release: "Contestants are invited to ask an expert's advice on any question beyond the $1,000 level. Experts appear via a live face-to-face Skype video call and will include newsmakers, journalists, former "Millionaire" contestants, politicians, doctors, professors and trivia champs, among others. Bill Nye appears during the show's first week, airing September 8-12, and Ogi Ogas, a former "Millionaire" contestant who won $500,000, appears during week two, airing September 15-19."

Here's a video clip that shows Skype in action.

This version of Millionaire is in syndication in the US. It hasn't made Nielsen's top-twenty-most-popular-syndicated-shows lately, but it is seen by millions of households every week.

Skype Product Placement - Who Wants to be a MillionaireExperts Skype in to the television studio. In this clip, Will Shortz, editor of the New York Times crossword puzzle, calls in from Pleasantville, New York.

See the little white mark in the upper left corner? He's using Skype's High Quality (640x480@30fps) video.

Skype Product Placement - Who Wants to be a MillionaireThe expert is shown on a large screen in the studio, exposing him to the in-studio experience and letting the contestant get a feel for how much to trust the expert with a lifeline.

Skype Product Placement - Who Wants to be a MillionaireWhen called on, the expert and the contestant talk to each other and the production team shows them side-by-side to the audience. The expert's reactions to being right, wrong, or not knowing add to the drama. 

On the web side of the business, this is the Millionaire home page. See the Skype artwork (bottom middle with the rainbow)?

Skype product placement - Who Wants to be a Millionaire?

The Skype badge takes you to the "Ask an Expert" landing page. It encourages you to download Skype. "It's free, easy and quick to get on Skype so check out all the great information below on how you can use Skype to connect with family and friends!"

Skype product placement - Who Wants to be a Millionaire?

This makes the fourth US/Canada television product product placement I know of in 2008. Oprah uses Skype for people to call her show, starting in March 2008. CNN started using Skype for interviews in March. And Skype was mentioned briefly in an episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent in July 2008 for a bit of character development involving transatlantic romance.

P.S. What television shows, movies, or characters would benefit from a little Skype?

 

RIM Demonstrates Ongoing Support for Older BlackBerries

While ZDNet has named BlackBerry Bold the most influential biztech product of 2008, RIM has not been neglecting the millions of owners of older 8xx0 series BlackBerries. Earlier this week their BlackBerry Connection Newsletter announced that version 4.5 upgrades to all 8xx0 Series BlackBerries (using BIS servers via carriers) are now available.

Why upgrade? To bring along, where practical and feasible, several features now found on the newer Bold, Storm, and 8900 Curve such as:

  • HTML email
  • View and edit email MS Word and MS PowerPoint attachments.
  • Download, save and edit files from the Internet
  • Enhanced video support for both recording and streaming: required to run Qik.Com and the forthcoming SlingPlayer Mobile for BlackBerry.
  • Record and Send a Voice Note which can be sent via email or MMS
  • Improved music management

Note that:

  • These updates only apply to BlackBerry Internet Server (BIS) users; BES users need to upgrade through their BES host enterprise.
  • Updates are carrier specific; early in the process you are asked for your PIN and taken to download files specific to your carrier.
  • Updates may also require an update of the BlackBerry Desktop Manager
  • MS Excel spreadsheet viewing and editing did not make the cut; they are only available for newer BlackBerry Bold, Storm and 8900 Curve.

Over the past few days I have successfully upgraded a Pearl 8100, a Pearl 8110 and an 8820. Provided you have BlackBerry Desktop Manager (preferably 4.7) installed on a Windows PC, it's a three to five click process (depending on whether you just follow the basic steps or want to change some parameters) to do the upgrade. While your BlackBerry data and applications are preserved after the upgrade, you may need to log into some services or applications again. The final step "Connecting to the Device" may take five to ten minutes - be patient.

One key feature is not in the list above but the new firmware includes new default fonts which are significantly more easily readable. Also, on the Pearls, there are changes to make using the SureType keyboard much easier, especially when it comes to suggested "word completion".

Definitely worth the upgrade - and required for video streaming applications.

A detailed description of the BlackBerry firmware upgrade process can be found at CrackBerry.com.

 

famcams

fam webcams by you.

Wishlist:

Does Logitech sell high quality Skype webcams in family packs? Support the viral impulse.

Tips:

  1. Position Skype below the webcam. So you'll be looking "at" the people on the other end of a video call.
  2. Look for noise cancellation in speakerphones. Clears up background noise. A little.
  3. Keep a notepad and marker handy to show hand drawn notes. Nothing talks like doodles.
  4. If you talk with your hands, sit back so the webcam picks up all of you.
  5. Get a hand mirror to check your grooming. Nothing like having someone point out food stuck in your teeth from across the world.
  6. Turn off automatic answer of video calls. Who knows what you'll be wearing?
  7. Reserve Skype names for your loved ones, especially kids. Don't leave them with georgewbush29837647a.
  8. Chat before you call. Invite them to video, don't assume they want to now. Netiquette.
  9. Make a contact group for your family. Easier to look them up.

What did I miss?

 

What’s your New Year’s Resolution?

IPEVO and 12seconds.tv are are hosting a contest this week: "Give a New Year's Resolution that will make the world a better place."

Leave a twelve second long video and you can win passes to MacWorld or IPEVO hardware for Skype. Twelve seconds is short, just 40-50 words.

Skype Journal will pass along a Sony PSP with Skype microphone to the most inspiring resolver; PSP courtesy of Skype North America.


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Skype settles patent suit for $2.3 million

Skype will pay off Mangosoft Intellectual Property, Inc. (OTC:MGOF) to drop a patent infringement suit. Mangosoft holds the assets of a defunct Internet software company. Settlement frees Mangosoft's lawyers to hunt for other deep pockets. And eBay and Skype to start the new year without this litigation on the books.

Mangosoft CEO Dale Vincent filed this with the SEC:

On December 4, 2008, MangoSoft, Inc. (the "Company") entered into an agreement to settle its patent litigation (the "Agreement") with Skype Technologies SA, Skype Software SARL and eBay Inc. ("eBay") titled Mangosoft Intellectual Property, Inc. v. Skype Technologies, S.A. et al., Civil Action No. 2:06CV-390 TJW, which was pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas (the "Litigation").

Under the terms of the Agreement, eBay and its affiliates and subsidiaries will receive a non-exclusive license to all of the patents or patent applications now owned by the Company, or in which the Company has a controlling interest, for a one time fee in the amount of $2,300,000. The Agreement also provides for general releases and dismisses the existing litigation between the parties.

 

Wii Speak connects living rooms

Nintendo Wii owners can buy a Wii Speak speakerphone and talk to three friends also using Wii Speak.microphone Nintendo bundles Wii Speak with Animal Crossing: City Folk and other software.

The social model emphasizes privacy. Your identity is secret. You must exchange Speak IDs before you can talk, and there is no public directory.

Wii Speak let's you IM, leave voice messages, annotate video messages, and speak live during some games. In City Folk, your Wii Mii avatars speak your chats with wiiSpeakcomic strip style balloons.

It's a closed system. Only microphones licensed by Nintendo will work with the system. Approved gear will show the Wii Speak icon (on the right) on their packaging.

This is not a platform play.

But it could be.

In-game talk is a fixture of RTS like World of Warcraft (voice chat and conferencing through third parties like Skype, TeamSpeak, or Ventrilo), virtual worlds like Second Life (includes f2f and distance voice chat), and multigame platforms like Xbox Live (voice and video chat).

The Wii, however, is culturally different from other online gaming social spaces. Wii folks don't consider themselves as "hard-core gamers". Yet. So it's good for the Wii Speak team to slowly discover what works best for Wiiland. Wii Speak is a good first step.

 

Pat Phelan Finds How Popular Skype Is, Really!

Today Ireland's favorite communications entrepreneur, Pat Phelan, put up a post: "How Popular is Skype, really?" Shows the potential for both Skype and its (prospective) partners, should the new executive team be able to execute on a restructured Skype and a viable partner program. And it shows the relative magnitude of the challenge that Truphone, Jajah and Rebtel are up against as they try to grow their business.

 

Joost drops desktops, moves to browsers

Joost's experiment in p2p video distribution is over. Technology is secondary to user experience and enterprise flexibility. Joost.com took over from the Joost software client today. This increases Joost's market reach, shortens release cycles, and slashes a user's adoption costs (no downloads).

Joost.com - cropped by you.

I'm not saying this approach would work for Skype (whose founders invested in Joost) but this gives some insight into the tradeoffs product architects consider.

Back to Joost, Christian Andersen wonders how Joost will be better than or different from other video sites like Hulu.

 

Skype hires Google PR exec for global communications vp

Brian O'Shaughnessy brianoshaughnessywill join Skype to direct corporate communications (media relations) from Skype's Luxembourg headquarters, per Michael Arrington. Hat tip to Neil Lindsey.

Brian is Google's Director, Global Corporate Communications and Public Affairs. Before that, Brian directed corporate communications at VeriSign, policy communications at Network Solutions and the Internet Alliance.

Brian got his start as a legislative aide for U.S. Congressman Edward Markey, known for his support of net neutrality and other Skype-friendly policies.

P.S. Brian, check out Mousel's Cantine.

 

Skype video cards: holiday cheer with a side of humbug

From Skype, the people who brought you the Skype Laughter Chain, here's the Skype Video Card service. A little flash widget lets you record a holiday greeting video into your browser. Share it with friends by embedding the video on your blog, emailing a link, or posting it to any of seven sites (facebook, reddit. friendfeed, digg, delicious, furl, or sister eBay company StumbleUpon).

It's fun, fast, free and easy.

Skype Video Cards
You start.

Skype Video Cards
Pick a cover image. 

Skype Video Cards
Confirm the image.

Skype Video Cards
Let the browser use your webcam.

Skype Video Cards
Record your video.

Skype Video Cards
Preview your video card

Skype Video Cards
Skype says
"Free video calls on Skype. Seeing is believing. Download Skype now"

Skype Video Cards
Share your card

Done.

It's lovely. Light. Simple. Elegant. 4 clicks and you're recording. Sweet. Useful.

Nicely done. 

A few cautions from the fine print:

  • Ownership. Skype reserves the right to use your video any time in any way. For example, they might include it in a television commercial, give copies to YouTube, share them with your next boss.  
  • Privacy/Anonymity. You're giving Skype the right to use your name in connection with your video. You're giving Skype the right to use anyone else's name too. No privacy. No authenticity. 
  • Vague Archival. Skype doesn't promise to keep your videos. They may delete videos when it suits them. Or not. They may keep them until the end of time.
  • This Video Upload and Download Is Unencrypted. Unlike Skype video calls or messages.

The video card site doesn't use Skype. At all.

  • No use of Skype names or address books to send video greetings.
  • No use of the Skype client to record the video message. Or to view video messages from others.
  • No use of the Skype client as a way to continue the conversation in a voice, chat or video call.
  • No use of Skype's advanced audio/video codecs for higher quality.

Skype Video Card highlights where Skype's technology is creaking with age at the end of 2008.

  • Skype doesn't offer a browser-based client. Rich Internet Apps improve virality and adoption with less downloading and faster time-to-value.
  • Skype's APIs don't expose an open web services platform beyond simple presence. So third parties cannot build Skype into, oh, say, video card apps running in browsers.
  • Skype doesn't support third-party authentication, identity interop, profile synchronization, or personal contact synchronization, or personal contact group synchronization. Far from the data portability ideals.
  • Skype's identity model does not facet identity. So you're stuck with one profile for everyone. For family. For every job. For every relationship. Forever.
  • Skype clients don't support inline media sharing. No playing of images, videos, sounds or other objects during a conversation.

Meanwhile, Happy Holidays!

 

50 people

50 people by you.

I use HiDef Conferencing for my work with DataPortability.org. You can Skype into your conference bridge directly for better audio quality. Free trials through February. But 50 people will cost you about $1 per person per month after that.

 

How Skype Will Grow in 2009

2008 is turning out to be a great year for Skype growth (real users), nearly matching the record year of 2006. In my view, the patterns of Skype growth are affected by:

  1. The popularity (name recognition) of the software itself... in comparison to communications alternatives.
  2. The capability of computers and mobile communication devices.
  3. The quality and capability of the software for multi-modal communication... in comparison to communications alternatives.
  4. The state of the world economy
  5. The availability of broadband

So for 2009 here is how things are shaping up.

  • Skype has no discernible marketing program. It never has. Skype relies almost entirely upon word-of-mouth. If Skype were to introduce a marketing program, the opportunity for growth could be significant. There seems to be zero prospect for such a marketing plan.
  • The power of computers will grow marginally. The capability of mobile devices, especially smartphones, will grow hugely. The latter is a real opportunity for Skype if it can develop quality software for the most popular platforms such as the iPhone, BlackBerry and Nokia N- and E-series. On the other hand, if the world economy sinks, then few people will be buying those new computers and mobile devices. Overall, this is not going to affect 2009 growth significantly.

 

The overall quality and capability of Skype client software will improve marginally. Aside from bringing out client software for mobile platforms, upcoming improvements in the client (especially video and audio) will affect Skype growth only on the margins.

  • Because Skype/Skype calling is free, and both SkypeIn and SkypeOut are very inexpensive, it is reasonable to assume that a poor economy is good for Skype in terms of its market share of communications. However, the overall market for communications may well decline in a bad economy. So while a declining economy is not good for Skype, it is less bad than for Skype's competitors.
  • The availability of broadband is a very important factor in the growth of Skype's "real users".

Summary: Skype growth (as measured by "real users") will continue on its current trajectory (averaging around 830,000 new "real users" per month). That is a huge number by anyone's standard. As in prior years, growth will be strong in the first quarter, slack in the second and third quarters, and strong in the fourth quarter.

 

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