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Microsoft Software Windows Technology

Microsoft Won't Force You To Use the New Skype Just Yet (neowin.net) 94

A few weeks ago, Microsoft launched Skype version 8.0 to replace Skype classic, or version 7. The company initially said that Skype classic would stop working on September 1st, but today, it extended the deadline and said it would continue to support the older application for the time being. Neowin reports: Spotted by Brad Sams of Thurrott.com, the information was posted as an update to a support forum that originally said when Skype v7 would be killed off. The update says the following: "Based on customer feedback, we are extending support for Skype 7 (Skype classic) for some time. Our customers can continue to use Skype classic until then. Thanks for all your comments - we are listening. We are working to bring all the features you've asked for into Skype 8. Watch this space." Microsoft didn't provide a new end of life date for Skype v7, but there's no doubt that it's still coming. Eventually, you'll have to move to Skype v8, or the UWP app if you're on Windows 10.
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Microsoft Won't Force You To Use the New Skype Just Yet

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  • I don't know anyone who still uses Skype. Everyone has moved to WhatsApp or Facebook's Messenger.

    • by BitterOak ( 537666 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @08:16PM (#57082004)

      I don't know anyone who still uses Skype. Everyone has moved to WhatsApp or Facebook's Messenger.

      Although there is a desktop version of WhatsApp, it is still tied to your phone. In other words, you still need to have it installed on your phone and you need to provide a phone number for it to work. Not everyone wants to have their messaging app tied to their phone number. And many people do not want to have a Facebook account at all due to numerous privacy concerns.

      • Everyone I know has moved to wire.app [wire.com]. Encrypted text, voice & video. Not tied to a phone number. Works on win, mac, linux, android, ios. Free. Open source [github.com].
        • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )
          And people I really want to talk with still use jabber with OTR. Which always was a much better solution and as a bonus wasn't tied to any vendor and uses point to point encryption between clients. Any servers in between don't see anything other than an encrypted blob.
        • by alexo ( 9335 )

          Everyone I know has moved to wire.app [wire.com]. Encrypted text, voice & video. Not tied to a phone number. Works on win, mac, linux, android, ios. Free. Open source [github.com].

          Dos it have a Pidgin plug-in?

        • by Vastad ( 1299101 )

          I checked the website but can't find any information that I can call an ordinary land-line telephone with it. Can it?

          Because if it can't, then it is not a replacement.

    • Everyone that isn't me then... not that I use Skype much either, but no way I'd use Facebook anything. Signal is more likely, does that do video? Oh, wait, why the hell would I even care? Video is for raving narcissists and grandmothers.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Gees no dude. Long duration video calls are for smart TVs and eParties. Where people from afar remotely attend your digital gathering. Don't think just video phone calls, although that is not a bad thing, you'll be able to tell that person calling you trying to sell you some shite, to fuck off, right to their face and they'll be able to see how pissed off you are and maybe changed profession. I would like to see the face of everyone I speak to on the phone, to see their eyes, to monitor their facial express

    • I use it for international phone calls.

    • by akozakie ( 633875 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @08:46PM (#57082152)

      Yeah, right, Facebook. Sorry, your view is skewed by the biased selection of friends. At most 10% of the people I know use Messenger. NOONE I know uses WhatsApp. At least 50% use Skype at work to some extent, ~10% use it a lot, maybe 30% in private life as well.

      Depends on the group. Most of the people I know don't even have an FB account and strongly refuse to create one, so Messenger is not even an option. WhatsApp... Does that even have a desktop version? Without it it won't matter much in a business context for at least a few years. If it does, it's not advertised enough.

      Yeah, my study group is biased just as well. But I acknowledge that and do not try to draw absolute conclusions like you do, because those would be "Messenger is niche, WhatsApp is completely irrelevant (why is it even alive? Teens?) and Skype trumps both, with old-school SMS texts, Slack, etc. covering the rest of the market." Not very convincing, right?.

      • WhatsApp... Does that even have a desktop version? Without it it won't matter much in a business context for at least a few years. If it does, it's not advertised enough.

        Look up Web Whatsapp [whatsapp.com].

        Now there's a huge difference.
        When you use Web Skype [skype.com], the WebApp is connecting directly to the Microsoft servers. You basically get in your browser the same thing as in the new gen applications. (The new gen Skype application is basically a wrapper around the web app).
        It's basically "your browser -> Microsoft's Skype server".

        In WhatsApp's case, it's a bit different. You still need a smartphone app (either Android or iOS), that app still makes connection to the Facebook servers itself

      • NOONE I know uses WhatsApp.

        Wow, selection bias much? Talk about skewed. 100% of people I know use WhatsApp. Furthermore complete strangers contact me on WhatsApp, as do companies. I get my airline tickets sent to me through WhatsApp.

        SMS? The only SMSes I have in my phone are from the government, microsoft, and Whatsapp themsevles in the form of 2FA codes and the one colleage I have in the UK where they don't use it as much .... dammit okay 99% of people I know use WhatsApp.

        • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )
          Oh dear, here's another totally different selection bias: no one I know uses whatsapp either. Snapchat, yes, but that seems to be on the wane. No one is on FB anymore, except boomers/grandparents, so what's this "Messenger" you're talking about? :) SMS? Still get those on a regular basis. iMessage? All the time, because just about everyone I know owns an iPhone and its just there and integrated. Plus, it allows for seamless SMS with the few remaining Android holdouts. It also allows for communicating with m
        • "Wow, selection bias much? Talk about skewed." - Now go back to my comment and re-read it, especially the last paragraph - and thanks for restating my point.

          A personal circle of friends is not a good model of the market, especially a global market. Depending on where you live, who you hang out with and so on you're going to get very different results. To the point where for example WhatsApp can range from "THE chat" through "very popular", "a niche app" to "noone uses that". You may see it as absolutely dom

      • WhatsApp is completely irrelevant (why is it even alive? Teens?)

        In the USA maybe, but not in the rest of the world.

    • by Trogre ( 513942 )

      Yup pretty much the same, or Viber or Zoom, here. Skype just isn't on the radar any more.

    • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

      We have three offices, two in the US and one in eastern europe. The bay area office uses slack and RHEL, the midwestern office uses email and windows, and the eastern europe office (the largest, their wages are about 20% us wages) uses Skype and some combination of windows and linux.

      I know WhatsApp is very popular in south america, most of western europe and chunks of asia, but Skype is still huge in eastern europe for some reason. I don't know why. I think because everyone already has their friends

    • I was a big Skype user back in the day to video chat with relatives via computer/webcam hooked up to a TV. MS had a window of opportunity when they bought Skype but let it die on the vine. Things that come to mind were a kinect-inspired, consumer level, tracking webcam, multi-user conference (say three people), and of course improved stability. I would have paid a modest subscription for a higher end consumer level video conference as well. Now we're all on Facetime with iPads. Skype is the crap we hav
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      What the user is still allowed to do is a funny read.
    • Skype is like broadcast TV, everyone who knows how uses something better, but your mom back home and Aunt Emma and Uncle Bob in Canadia and Granny Smith down south all still rely on it. So on the one hand it's not something you can easily drop without upsetting people you know, but on the other the natural attrition of the user base will mean at some point it won't be a concern any more.
    • by Gabest ( 852807 )
      The majority uses WeChat.
    • I use (the old) Skype as it allows a convenient way to screen sharing + group video chats + ability to run multiple accounts at once (this makes it useful for remote support for clients .. I can switch from video to screen sharing mid-chat etc.). Neither WhatsApp nor FB messenger can do those things; HangOuts is a privacy nightmare and seem to be very few people using it. Actually, there doesn't seem to be any reasonable alternatives, and the new UWP skype is a feature and UI regression. Skype came many yea

    • Every job I have worked at uses either Skype or Jabber.

      I prefer Skype.

      For home use, though, you are probably correct.

  • Listen to your enterprise and power users. Let us install Windows 7 for longer. I would love the new Threadripper 2 supported with Windows 7.
    • +1.

      Windows 10 sucks. In more ways than one. Not only is it slow even on newer machines, bit calls home FAR too often.

      I run Win 10 in a VM. But it's a VERY good machine, so I can assign resources to the VM beyond most laptops. Even so, 10 is sluggish, and my network monitor is constantly popping up, telling me that 10 is telling Microsoft about damned near everything I try to do.

      I only have a couple of programs I still need Windows for, so for the most part I'll stick with Linux and MacOS.

      THEY ke
      • Oh... and my go-to version of Windows is 7. It is far more performant and far less snoopy.
      • by jma05 ( 897351 )

        Windows 10 is snappy, as long as you have an SSD. It is slow, if you run it off a HDD.
        Yes, It should not be this way, but I don't think anyone using it off a modern, even budget laptop with a modest SSD, finds it slow. That is the only resource it badly needs.
        Yes, "telemetry" that the user is not allowed to disable (or even fully disclosed) is basically spyware. We have more of a case for open source OS today than 10 years ago.

  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @08:15PM (#57081994) Homepage

    ... when they shut off 7, I'll be off skype.

    Last week I tried v8. And was relieved that there was still some place to download v7. What remained of the user interface was a bad attempt to map a screen-limited smart phone app onto a desktop.

    • by Malc ( 1751 )

      Maybe I'm blind, but where have they hidden the download link to Skype classic?

      • Type "download skype classic" in to the evil Google search box, and several non-Microsoft sites, including Bleeping Computer, come up.

    • V8 inhereted all the great features of the Windows Store App, such as the inability to adjust any camera settings and the wonderful bug that prevents autoexposure working correctly.

      What a win. I can only recommend it. ... If you're ugly and you don't want anyone to see you during a video chat.

  • Isn't everybody on Slack now?

    • by Trogre ( 513942 )

      sssh, do you want them to get bought up too?

  • On Windows 10 you may not have to update, because the update and subsequent spontaneous restart will be automated for you
  • Not only will Microsoft NOT force me to use "the New Skype" when it comes out, it won't LET me use the old one.

    I tried using it a couple of months ago and I couldn't remember my password. Part of the "prove to us you own the account" process Microsoft has is "what is the last password you remember?" Well, deary, since there's only ever been one password on the account. if I could remember the last one I wouldn't have to be trying to reset it, now would I?

  • For good reason (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Chas ( 5144 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @01:50AM (#57083142) Homepage Journal

    People are reticent to upgrade because the new version is yet another triumph of Obfuscation Of Functionality for Microsoft.
    Let's hide shit under nearly invisible screen cues with no tooltips and watch people twist in the wind! WOO! FUNNY!

    • by eagl ( 86459 )

      Agreed. They've hidden everything useful, wrecked a completely useable UI trying to imitate the stylistic cues of a river rock.

    • Obfuscation Of Functionality

      Don't be daft. No functionality is obfuscated. Microsoft doesn't bother playing those games. They simply outright remove functionality. Who needs camera settings anyway.

  • Microsoft can't and won't force me to use any version of skype. After MS bought skype and made some UI changes that made it harder to use, I just switched to facetime. "Problem" solved. Even my Mom is getting an iphone, in part so she can use facetime with everyone else who has ditched skype after MS ruined the UI.

    Skype circa 2011 was pretty useable. It's been destroyed since then by UI mismanagement. I still prefer windows over apple OS and I use a windows computer instead of a mac, but for video chat

    • by Aereus ( 1042228 )

      I find it humorous and sad at the same time to think they probably have a whole team of people responsible for the UI changes over the years and this is what they thought was best. Who looks at the stuff and says "Yeah, the UX is very streamlined and intuitive now, let's go with this."

  • I thought that the Linux/Android version of Skype was Microsoft's attempt to move people onto the Windows platform. And then they released the same shitty layout on Windows.
  • by 6Yankee ( 597075 ) on Tuesday August 07, 2018 @04:27AM (#57083626)

    Are they going to reinstate the APIs on which my Skype certified DECT handset depends?

    Yeah, thought not.

    Another perfectly functional load of hardware gone to landfill.

  • At work we use Skype for Business, which is OK (considering we used to use Jabber). But because we have some contract teams that aren't on the corporate network, some genius decided that we can use regular Skype to chat with them as a 'group chat'. AND.. we are piloting MS Teams as well because regular Skype is so unstable and just stops working randomly all the time - which kind of defeats the purpose of having a persistent group chat. So I have THREE different chat programs, and all of them are pretty

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