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June 2009

Howard Wolinsky

Skype 1.1 for iPhone and iPod touch out now

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 30, 2009 in Business, In the news.

Some of you may have seen update notifications in iTunes or on the App Store on your device, but for those of you who haven't - Skype 1.1 for iPhone and iPod touch is now available for download.

New languages

Skype for iPhone speaks your language - it's now available in Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish, Swedish and Traditional Chinese as well as English.

Voicemail and SMS

We've listened to your feedback - Skype for iPhone now lets you listen to your Skype voicemail while you're on the move, as well as send super low-cost SMSs to friends and family around the world.
... and more

Additionally, we've made some improvements to the look and feel, particularly when calling phones using the dial pad.

So - what are you waiting for? Download the update in iTunes, or launch the App Store on your device and tap Updates to grab the latest version.

Note: This version requires iPhone OS 2.2 or 3.0. If you're still using iPhone OS 2.1 or 2.0, you'll need to update to 3.0 in order to run Skype 1.1 for iPhone - it's free and easy to do. Skype for iPhone is not supported on devices running modified versions of iPhone OS.

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Howard Wolinsky

Skype 3.0 for Windows Phones available for download

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 30, 2009 in Business, In the news.

It's better than ever before - the Gold version of Skype 3.0 for Windows Phones is now available for download.

It includes two cool new features: SMS and file transfer. Sending SMSs using Skype is a great way to reach friends and family instantly anywhere in the world - Skype's low rates mean that you won't have to break the bank to do it. And file transfer lets you send files quickly when you're on the move.

We've ironed out the remaining wrinkles since the Beta release, and it's ready to go. Download it now and give it a whirl.

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Howard Wolinsky

Skype-based Trunk Club personal shoppers help men shop for clothes

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 24, 2009 in Business.

What is it about us guys? Why do so many of us hate to go shopping? Maybe it's genetic.

Whatever the reason, Joanna Van Vleck, a personal stylist from Bend, Ore. has started a company, Trunk Club, a personal shopping service to take the pain out of shopping--with an assist from Skype video calling.

She told me that her typical client is a professional guy, somewhere in his 30s to 50s, who may be too busy to shop in retail stores and possibly overwhelmed by the multitude of choices online.

Her staff of experts meets with clients virtually on Skype video calling, learns about their clothing needs, sizes, etc. and then ships off a trunk of clothes for the men to try on and discuss on Skype. Clients buy what they want and then send back what they don't want.
The service is free, but the experts are paid a commission just as in a retail store.

So far, all the experts are women. But Joanna is on the look-out for male staffers.
Joanna said her experts aren't meant to replace significant others.

If you get your shopping done online via Skype video calling, you save gas. And you also have more time to spend with your significant other--and doing more shopping?

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Howard Wolinsky

Student undergoing chemo goes to HS graduation via Skype

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 18, 2009 in In the news.

I've been reporting lately on how the classroom can use Skype to open up to the bigger world.

Former Sen. Bob Dole used Skype video calling to tell a Kansas class about his World War II experiences.

And sci-fi author Cary Doctorow told a Colorado classroom why the local school board should approve his book.

Now CBS 13 in Sacramento, Calif., is reporting how an 18-year-old high school senior battling cancer attended his graduation via Skype video calling.

Steven Lee, just months from graduation, was diagnosed with leukemia. But reporter Ron Jones shared how Steven was able to attend the graduation at Rosemont High School while he was in San Francisco undergoing chemotherapy for leukemia.

Jones said "With a laptop in hand, Steven watched the entire graduation from his hospital bed, listening to every inspiring speech and song, but what really made it a true graduation experience is when he was able to virtually walk across the stage while I accompanied his mother to accept the diploma.

"It was quite an experience, especially being in the hospital and dealing with IT guys and dealing with my health as well," Steven said. "Pretty awesome."

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Howard Wolinsky

'Celebs' in Costa Rican jungle call home on Skype video

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 13, 2009 in In the news.

First, Oprah Winfrey used Skype video calling to reach out to her guests, both regular people and celebs. Then, Jimmy Fallon used Skype to add a tech edge to his new Late Night Show.

Now, the "stars" of NBC's "I'm a Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here!" are using Skype video calling to call home from the Costa Rican jungle, where the show is set.

Illinois' former Gov. Rod Blagojevich made international news over corruption allegations and became a celeb of sorts. To bring in some income as he awaited trial, he had wanted to appear on NBC's "I'm a Celebrity." But when a federal judge wouldn't allow him to leave the country, his wife Patti went instead.

The Chicago Sun-Times Paige Wiser reports that Patti, who ate a tarantula on the show's food challenge, called home via Skype video calling in the latest episode.

"We miss you and we're proud of you," said the former governor from Chicago.

Rod.png

"Did you like the tarantula?" asked 5-year-old Annie, Patti's five-year-old daughter. Annie asked her mom if she had made new friends on the TV show. Apparently, she had since Lou Diamond Phillips had picked her to make the call.

Blago.png

"My girls were smiling," she said after the call. "My husband looked a little tired."

Phillips and Daniel Baldwin also got to call home with Skype video calling.

Baldwin's pregnant wife showed off "the bump" he is missing. But he was sent home.

If you're stuck in Costa Rican jungle on a TV show, or anywhere else, you can use Skype video calling to call home. Remember Father's Day is coming.

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Howard Wolinsky

San Fran 49ers player "meats" up with family via Skype video calling

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 9, 2009 in In the news.

The San Francisco 49ers have Skype in their playbook.

In his first The Meat Zone blog, the 49ers' Demetric "Meat" Evans reports that many players use Skype to stay in touch with their families while on the road.

The defensive end writes: "One thing I do a lot of is use Skype, which is a video phone service over the internet. That's the best way I can see my wife when I talk to her on the phone, so I'm glad we have internet in our rooms. It's nice to talk to her every night before I relax and get ready mentally for the next day.

Skype must be catching on the NFL.

Cleveland Browns Coach Eric Mangini recently reported his staff was using Skype to go through the playbook with players in Skype video calls as well as to stay in touch with players who had been sidelined with injuries.

Skype played a supporting role in a recent Oscar win.


Could there be a Super Bowl and Vince Lombardi trophy in Skype's future, too?

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Howard Wolinsky

Skype To Go number helps reach from Lake Zurich, Ill. to Zürich, Switzerland

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 8, 2009 in Business.

With local phone tariffs, in the old days, only a few years ago, it seemed cheaper to call my brother 2,100 miles away in the San Francisco Bay area than to call my brother who lives 41 miles away in the Chicago suburbs.

It really rankled me when I got my landline bill.

But Skype has smoothed things over.

My Unlimited World subscription with Skype makes it the same price to call either my brother or my cousins and friends in Europe, South America and Australia via Skype on the landline phone without toll charges.

Though my wife is a tech type, she hasn't taken to using Skype on the computer just yet. So I came up with a plan.

I signed up for a Skype To Go number, which comes with my Skype subscription.

You can also use a Skype To Go number if you have Skype credit.

After I got my Skype To Go number, I set up speed dials for some frequently called numbers--across town and across the world to reach friends, family and business associates.

With Skype To Go, you can call phones abroad or in this country, reaching whomever you want, wherever you want, whenever you want.

In addition to the United States, To Go numbers are available in Australia, Chile, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Ireland, New Zealand, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom .Low-cost calling rates are applied for those using Skype credit. Calls are free to countries included in my subscription.

So, my Unlimited World subscription gives me free local calls via my To Go number. This way my wife and I can call our son in downtown Chicago.

I also use To Go while I'm on the go on the commuter train or walking in downtown Chicago. My speed dial listings serve as a minimalist phone directory for commonly used numbers. I can catch up with my friends in UK or Arizona while riding the commuter rails and since I have Unlimited World subscription these calls are free.

I shared my secret with a student friend. She's from Switzerland but attending grad school in Chicago. She now calls her family and friends around the world while commuting to class on the CTA (Chicago Transit Authority). Nice.

It's a sweet deal to reach out and call someone--without running up charges while calling Lake Zurich, the Chicago burbs, or Zürich, Switzerland's largest city.

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Howard Wolinsky

Travel author uses Skype to avoid some air travel: his parrots get it, but his publisher doesn't

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 6, 2009 in Business, In the news.

Travel book author Joe Sharkey was enjoying the Tucson desert air too much to trek back to New York to meet with his publisher.

Still, he had no choice. So he went.

But these days, the travel writer often avoids unnecessary travel.

He describes in a New York Times article how he does the next best thing: He goes on Skype video.

"Until about a year ago, I used to scoff at the assertion, long made by the videoconferencing industry, that its high-end technology, in many cases, negated the need to get on an airplane and travel to a face-to-face meeting. But starting early last year, sales began to rise, offering evidence that videoconferencing was, in fact, being used more often to replace some business travel," he said.

"I now regularly use videoconferencing. Often, my wife has to stay back East while I have the luxury of working in Arizona. We use a simple Skype Internet connection -- little cameras and microphones hooked to our laptops -- to hold nightly videoconferences, in which our two pet parrots in New Jersey also participate."

He describes his parrots as "early adapters, following the screen image, replying vocally, dancing with joy when motivated. They seem to get it -- except that the chatty African grey evidently believes that I am actually inside my wife's laptop and marches behind the screen to peck at it and get me out. I mean, they're birds, after all."


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Howard Wolinsky

Tune in: NBC's Fallon, Fox's Van Susteren join Skype TV bandwagon

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 5, 2009 in Business, In the news.


Oprah Winfrey led the way, showing broadcasters how to use Skype video calling on network TV.
A few have been quick to follow.

From the get-go, Jimmy Fallon, former Saturday Night Live comedian and now host of NBC's Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, promised to integrate tech into his show, including Skype.

This week, he featured director Jon Favreau, who talked from Canada on Skype video about the much-anticipated Ironman 2 due out next year.

The director had twittered a heads-up to fans: "I'll be skyping a bit from the set of Iron Man tonite on Jimmy Fallon."

But during the interview, Favreau actually didn't show his hand--other than teasing viewers with a glimpse at a bionic hand. He said he was Robert Downey Jr.'s "stunt hand."

He joked that Marvel comics had been on his case for twittering too much from his set.

Over at the FOX News Channel, Greta Van Susteren, host of On the Record at 10 p.m. ET weeknights, tells her fans they can "interact with Greta directly here on her blog - post a comment, follow her on Twitter, or chat with her on Skype -- her screenname is GretaWire."

Stay tuned to see the next Skype development.

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Howard Wolinsky

'Not education as usual," with Skype and author Cory Doctorow

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 4, 2009 in In the news.

Anne Smith, a language arts teacher at Arapahoe High School in Centennial, Colo., says her classroom motto is: "This is not education as usual."

Case in point: Language arts students typically read books by dead authors.

But Smith's ninth graders recently landed a live one, science fiction writer Cory Doctorow, to speak to their class in May on Skype.

The ninth grade students were going through a mock exercise to persuade school board members to add Doctorow's controversial 2008 book, Little Brother, to the reading list.

Karl Fisch, the school's technology director, said he thinks Little Brother is "controversial because of the topic of privacy versus security, although certainly the issue of teens having sex (once) and drug use (once or twice if you include alcohol) is one controversial aspect."


So what could be better than to have Doctorow himself speak to the class and explain why ninth graders should be able to able to read his book?

Smith said in this Skype video interview how impressed she was with students selecting Doctorow's book, seeking him out online and getting his OK to appear in class via Skype video.


Arapahoe students Ashley Schuett and Laura Olson told School Library Journal: "We were very surprised with the rapid response from Doctorow, who was extremely passionate about communicating and helping our group get Little Brother approved for the Littleton Public School's ninth-grade curriculum. Therefore, we have the same expectation for any writer/researcher/academic, etc., because they are trying to pass on their knowledge to others, so why not directly pass it on to us?"

The students said Skype enabled them to have "a more free-flowing conversation. Exchanging letters or emails and waiting days or perhaps weeks for a response slows down the process of learning."

So it was education at Internet speed.

Smith told the journal: "Imagine reading a piece of work in an English classroom where the author was still alive. The engagement that follows from actually being able to question an author's work, and examine purpose and intent is one not found in most traditional classrooms.

Skype is opening up the classroom to experts of all sorts.

For example, I recently reported on how former Sen. Bob Dole spoke about his World War II experiences to students in Sterling, Kan.

Fisch said Skype overcomes geography: the students were in Colorado, while Doctorow was in London.

He added the video technology with Skype and a webcam no longer is a barrier because it is inexpensive and easy to use:

"Skype has allowed us to do things we couldn't do before--without the technology."

In his Fischbowl blog, Fisch wrote: "I love the fact that these students knew a capability existed, assumed it was their prerogative to take advantage of that, and then took the initiative to contact Mr. Doctorow. If we not only enable our students to be connected learners, but also change their mindset so that they expect to be connected learners, we've done a good thing."

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Howard Wolinsky

Skype scores high for in-laws living off the grid in solar house

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 4, 2009 in In the news.

Daniel Terdiman, CNET staff writer and geek gestalt blogger, describes how he set a network for his Net newbie in-laws, Donna and Tyler, in their mountain-top home.

His in-laws live off the electrical grid in a Northern California house largely powered with solar energy.

Among other things Terdiman recommended Skype to enable Donna to communicate more easily with her sister, setting up Skype on her Mac.

Daniel said: "When I called her new account from my laptop (in the bathroom so as to avoid an echo) she sounded delighted at the service's ease of use.
'That's just phenomenal,' Donna said when I emerged from the bathroom.

Terdiman's mother-in-law was thrilled with her new Net capabilities:
"I'm overjoyed," Donna said. "On a scale of one to a zillion, I'd rate it 999 billion 984 million."

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Howard Wolinsky

Freelancer (me) tells how an online Skype number helps in work

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 3, 2009 in Business.


I use Skype everyday to make calls as a freelance writer. It saves me thousands of dollars a year. Free is good, especially for a freelancer.

But I also pay for Skype products that help me do my job and to stay in touch.

One of my favorites is my Skype online number.

I set up the number to make it easy for people I want to interview to call me from their landlines and cellphones.

Generally, I prefer to call out on Skype so I can record conversations using Call Recorder software. But some people prefer to call me.

My Skype online number makes it seamless and easy for them to reach me.

They dial my number and my computer rings. They don't know the difference--except the sound quality is typically better than on my AT&T line.

It rings wherever I happen to be logged into Skype--on my desktop at home or my laptop at on the go. I can take the calls on the road, just about anywhere in the world.

If I had the number when I was in Peru or UK last year, family and friends back in the USA could have called me, just as if I were home. I plan to take my laptop and online Skype number with me to New Zealand later this year so my kids can stay in touch for the cost of a local call.

The cost for an online number is just $18 for three months or $60 for a full year. You can also get up to 50 percent off this cost with the purchase of a monthly subscription. For more info, click here.

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Howard Wolinsky

Unplanned space walk via Skype--in Kansas Cosmosphere

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 1, 2009 in .

I went on an unplanned "space walk" thanks to Joel Walker, vice president of the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Museum, a Smithsonian-affiliated museum in Hutchinson, Kan., and Skype.

I had heard that this outstanding museum, which tells the story of the American-Soviet space race, was a major user of Skype.


Joel Walker, the museum's vice president, told me Skype has helped Cosmosphere reach out in tough times to put its educators in touch with teachers and students who can't afford the trip to the Cosmosphere.

The museum brings its exhibits and collection--second only to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum for U.S. Space Artifacts and the largest collection of Russian space artifacts outside of Moscow--to classrooms in Kansas and around the globe, as far as South Africa.

Joel said the exhibits and artifacts often serve as backdrops as museum staffers speak via Skype to classrooms. He said: "We're trying to use Skype in every mode that we can to reach out to students and teachers across the globe.."

I suggested that it might be nice if he could show me--us--around the Cosmosphere. Joel obliged me with a space walk, so to speak. He simply picked up his laptop and aimed his webcam and gave a tour of the museum, admired by space enthusiasts worldwide, via Skype.

It was the next best thing to being there.

Take a look:

Joel took me to see the Cosmosphere's two largest classrooms with space suits and space station pieces. " We took a sneak peek at our lobby where you can walk under an actual flown SR-71, a T-38 and a full-scale Space Shuttle Orbiter...took a rather long look at the Lunar Module and Rover.
"The Lunar Module was built as a backdrop for the networks during the moon landings. We built our Rover. Both items have been used in several films, including Tom Hanks' IMAX production 'Magnificent Desolation.'"

Joel invited me out to Kansas to see the museum. I'm sure he wouldn't mind if you stopped by--virtually or actually.

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Howard Wolinsky

Oprah pushes Skype 'to the limit'

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 1, 2009 in Business, Events, In the news.

Oprah Winfrey invited her viewers on May 21 to come along on "an extreme Oprah Show adventure" with Skype.

Joshoprah.jpg

In the show, entitled, "Where the Skype Are You?," the Chicago talk show host pushed the limits of Skype.

She showed how Skype video can connect people in such remote places as the Arctic and Antarctic, on board a Virgin America plane 37,000 feet above San Francisco and on board USS Louisville, six stories below the Pacific off Hawaii.

Oprah described Skype CEO Josh Silverman as the "wizard" of Skype, connecting from Oprah's studio in Chicago to Silverman in London. He said to Oprah: "You have been putting us completely to the test."

Oprah is no newcomer to the Skype world. She has been using it to connect to celebs and ordinary people since March 2008.

"I just love Skype. Love it. Love Skype," she said.

Oprah recently gave Twitter, the short messaging service, a boost. But she said Skype is "a step above Twitter Twitter."

She had Skype connections set up outside her Chicago studio, in a Best Buy electronics store in midtown Manhattan and Harrods in London. She shared laughs with a young man shopping for a Mother's Day gift and with a man addicted to buying green socks to wear on Fridays.

She also connected with some folks featured in this blog: Skype sketcher Barbara Muir, of Toronto, who drew a picture of Oprah based on a view from Skype video, and Ed Gallagher, the blind San Franciscan, who sails a boat, skis and rides a bike while guided by friends who navigate for him based on views from a Skype-connected helmet
.
Skype connections are not ordinarily available at Palmer Station at Antarctica--2,000 miles from the South Pole--because of limited bandwidth. But researcher Neal Scheibe was able to take advantage of a Skype link to speak with Oprah to show the tech's potential. He said he and his colleagues planned to speak to classrooms via Skype while they had the link. That inspired Oprah to say she might use Skype to teach students in a school she established in South Africa.

In an amusing segment, Oprah, Silverman and a couple passengers aboard Virgin America had a wine testing with Randall Grahm, of Bonny Doon Vineyard in Santa Cruz, Calif. He said he started doing wine tastings on Skype because he was tired of flying to meet with distributors.

Silverman explained how easy it is to download the software at Skype.com, to register for free and to find friends and family among the 400 million people who use Skype to call for free in Skype-to-Skype audio and video calls or for low rates via Skype to landlines and mobile phones.

Oprah encouraged her viewers to give it a try: "You can get your own Skype on America. Get your Skype on."

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Howard Wolinsky

New Skype beta 4.1 for Windows is about screensharing--and more

By My status Howard Wolinsky on June 1, 2009 in In the news.

Screensharing has been a hit for Skype in the Mac world with Skype 2.8 for Mac.

Now the concept is available in the Windows world with the beta version of Skype 4.1 for Windows.

Peter Parkes announced the new news on the main blog.

Peter explained: "Have you ever tried to help a friend with their computer? Or take a colleague through a presentation? Or help a friend with their essay? Or show off a killer move in a game? Well, screensharing in Skype makes doing things like that super-easy. Just click the Share menu in the conversation area of the Skype window."

With this beta, you can share your screen with any other Skype user on Windows, Mac or Linux. You can share your whole screen, or just a selection, and best of all, it's totally free.

Peter notes that Skype has "added birthday reminders, and you'll also be able to send contacts to other Skype users. For those of you who missed these features in the last version, they're back .

In addition, 4.1 Beta lets you import contacts from a range of other services including Gmail, Windows Live Hotmail, Yahoo! and AOL.

You can download the beta, and in return, Skype is asking for feedback about the new features, and let us know if you spot anything which doesn't work as expected. You can fill out feedback survey .

Just keep sharing on the screen and in the survey. The input will help improve your work as well as future versions of Skype. It's all about sharing and caring.

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Recent posts

  • Skype 1.1 for iPhone and iPod touch out now
  • Skype 3.0 for Windows Phones available for download
  • Skype-based Trunk Club personal shoppers help men shop for clothes
  • Student undergoing chemo goes to HS graduation via Skype
  • 'Celebs' in Costa Rican jungle call home on Skype video
  • San Fran 49ers player "meats" up with family via Skype video calling
  • Skype To Go number helps reach from Lake Zurich, Ill. to Zürich, Switzerland
  • Travel author uses Skype to avoid some air travel: his parrots get it, but his publisher doesn't
  • Tune in: NBC's Fallon, Fox's Van Susteren join Skype TV bandwagon
  • 'Not education as usual," with Skype and author Cory Doctorow

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