hardware

Skype Developing Mobile Internet Phone

Slimy   on 13 October 2007 - 22:34 · 4 comments & 2987 views

Advertisement (Why?)
Later this year, Skype plans to release a mobile Internet cell phone together with the Three operator in the UK. An official for Three confirmed that the company was working with Skype to produce a handset that would allow users in Britain to make free calls on the Internet. The phone is expected to work like any mobile but will also include a Skype function to contact other Skype customers. The device, with an appropriate 3G/GPRS/Wi-Fi roaming, would allow to call worldwide for the cost of data transfer, which will eventually become much more affordable compared to voice calls. Given that currently there are only satellite phone services that cover the whole planet, Skype may offer something similar for areas featuring wireless local area and wide area network connection (WLAN, WWAN).

News source: Xbit Laboratories

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 4 additional comments
#1 DodgeViper on 14 Oct 2007 - 15:22
This is what I've been waiting for, unlimited data transfer isn't that expensive so hopefully this will finally be the end to expensive mobile calls.
#2 LTD on 14 Oct 2007 - 15:55
Slightly OT . . . Skype is such an amazing product - the free features alone make it worth the download. It's a very advanced app, and really, the best in its class. Add to that the for-pay features (great value), and you get a truly useful app.

#3 PermaSt0ne on 14 Oct 2007 - 18:39
finally i'll be able to go to diffrent countries and actually have my phone work there, instead of being cut off for 2 weeks at a time
#4 +Fozzieb on 15 Oct 2007 - 07:54
I have a Nokia N73 on Three with a £5 a month xseries add on that gives me unlimited skype calls already, been out for months.

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)