iCall App Allows 3G VOIP Calls for iPhone, iPad
iCall announces that Apple has changed its developer SDK and VOIP calls over cellular networks can now be placed on the iPhone, iPod Touch and, theoretically, the iPad.
The iPad
wasn't the only Apple news to emerge on Jan. 27.
iCall, a privately held VOIP (voice over IP) calling company, announced on the
same day that Apple had updated its SDK (software development kit) to allow
VOIP calls over cellular networks, and that iCall's eponymous application was
the first and only to place VOIP calls over 3G cellular networks on the iPhone
and iPod Touch.
"I applaud Apple's decision to allow iCall to extend its functionality
beyond Wi-Fi and onto the 3G networks," iCall CEO
Arlo Gilbert said in a statement. "This heralds a new era for VOIP
applications on mobile platforms, especially for iCall and our free calling
model. I hope that now more developers will begin using our VOIP as a platform
to integrate VOIP into their applications."
Some suspected that Apple
was building its own voice solution, which would be one explanation for why
it originally chose not to allow the Google Voice application in the App Store.
The rejection, which AT&T backed, saying Google Voice violated the Federal
Communications Commission's network neutrality principles, prompted
the FCC to launch an inquiry into the matter.
On Jan. 26, however, Google
rolled out an HTML5-based version of Google Voice, which is now live for smartphones with iPhone OS 3.0 and
higher, as well as those running Palm's WebOS.
iCall-which is now available in the App Store, and offers free local and
long-distance calls over 3G data networks-should, in addition to working with
the iPhone and iPod Touch, be compatible with the iPad.
"All that we can say is that any existing iPhone apps function as written
on the iPad," iCall CTO Andy Muldowney told eWEEK. "They just scale it
up so it appears larger."
Muldowney said he wasn't able to comment on whether or not iCall is owned by
Apple.









