Verizon Wireless and Skype announced a partnership Feb. 16 that will
extend Skype mobile services to Verizon customers with data plans, over
the Verizon 3G network.
Beginning in March, the Skype offering will be available to qualifying
customers with nine 3G smartphones — the BlackBerry Storm 9530, Storm2
9550, Curve 8330, Curve 8530, 8830 World Edition and Tour 9630, as well
as the Motorola Droid, HTC Droid Eris and Motorola Devour — before
later extending to other models.
The offering will allow Verizon customers to make and receive unlimited
Skype-to-Skype voice calls to any Skype user; call international phone
numbers at Skype Out calling rates; send and receive instant messages
to other Skype users; and stay continuously connected and clued into
friends’ online presence.
“Skype mobile … [is] effectively giving customers with smartphones and
data plans the option to extend their unlimited calling community to
hundreds of millions of Skype users around the globe,” John Stratton,
executive vice president and chief marketing officer for Verizon, said
in a statement.
Josh Silverman, CEO of Skype, added, “Verizon Wireless will give U.S.
consumers the best Skype experience on mobile phones and will truly
change the way people call their friends and family internationally.”
On Feb. 5, Skype
announced on its Web site that it was close to offering an app that
would that let iPhone users place VOIP (voice over IP) calls over 3G
networks. The company attributed the delay to waiting until it
could offer the “very best audio quality” as well as tools offering
feedback about each call, which it plans to offer with “CD-quality
sound.”
At the time of the February announcement, Neil Mawston, an analyst with
Strategy Analytics, told eWEEK that while many carriers hoped to delay
the introduction of mobile Skype, it’s unlikely they could stop it all
together.
“For AT&T and other carriers, iPhone Skype will create additional downward pressure on the prices they charge for cellular voice calls,” Mawston said.
Charles King, principal analyst with Pund-IT Research, added that VOIP
is only one issue eroding the demand for carriers’ standalone services.
“Many people — particularly younger consumers — are replacing
traditional wire line services with cell phones, which has hurt
traditional carriers like AT&T but benefitted wireless providers
like Verizon,” King told eWEEK.
“Rather than dropping voice calling prices outright, I’m seeing
carriers of every sort, along with cable companies, working hard to
bundle voice into larger data service packages. In such cases, the
actual cost of voice calling — or high-speed Internet access, TV
services, etc. — often remains essentially opaque. It’s part of a
bigger bundle.”
He said that bundled monthly services are enabling carriers to get the
prices they want for the data — even that of VOIP calls — being carried
over their networks.
“I think that voice represents a small piece of that pie and an even
smaller portion of the strategy behind bundled services,” King said.