what is Skype?

Skype is a full-feature communications suite which allows its users to engage in text, voice, and video chats as well as send and receive files, send funds through a PayPal account, has collaboration tools, and games, -- and most people will never need or use a ton of the extras.




Skype, like many things comes in many flavors. Let's break down the basic (free) service and what comes with it.
Skype-to-Skype calls: Once you set up an account with Skype, you can use it to make voice calls to any other user on the network -- regardless of what country they happen to be in. You can also set up a conference call with up to twenty-five people, or invite a contact to join a call in progress.*
Transfer calls to people on Skype: With Skype, it is quick and easy to transfer calls to your Skype contacts - useful in a holiday setting when family member are talking, or in business if you need to send a caller to a different colleague.

Skype-to-Skype chats: you can use Skype as an Instant Messenger and chat via text with any contact; you can also theoretically add up to one hundred fifty people in a single chat...
Skype-to-Skype Video calls: If you have a webcam hooked up to your computer, you can use Skype for video chats with other members on the network.
File Transfer: as with most decent communications systems, you can also transfer files with a click of a button. Unlike many other systems though, you can also send a file to a group of people. Again, this is useful in either a family or business setting.

*(one point of clarification: it is unclear whether the free services are 25 or 9 callers. Documentation sites both numbers as a free feature.)


As you can see, even if you never use anything but the free service offered by Skype it is an incredibly powerful tool. However,…
…even if you don't want to use the Subscription (paid) Services you can purchase Skype Credit to access all the various paid features on a pay-as-you-go basis. I will cover these in another article. I mention it here only because say you want to occasionally use Skype to call someone who does not have the software.

One example might be that you are in the United States and your long distance does not cover Canadian calls. With Skype, you can call a friend in Ottawa for about three cents a minute!*
So what do you need to do all this? Not much. You can actually use Skype over a dial-up connection though a broadband is the recommended speed, regardless of the connection, you first you need to download and install the software. It is quick, easy, and painless.

Next, you need to create an account which only takes a second. You need a valid email address; you not be spammed, I think I've only ever gotten four emails - two in response to a support request I issued; a username, and a password.


That gets you in and running. To make a call to another Skype member you need there Skype name, a microphone, and speakers. If you use Outlook then during the install Skype can import the addresses from your address book and see if they belong to registered Skypers. (Do not worry; nobody will get an email advertising anything. The software simply checks to see if people you know are users, and then asks if you would like to add them as a Skype contact.)


Download Skype From Here.


Thanks For Reading.

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