Fring has introduced an already popular new app to the Apple App
Store that allows iPhone 4 owners to enjoy two-way video calls over
WiFi or 3G, with friends on older iPhone, Android or Symbian
smartphones.
The app has proven so popular, however, that the Fring Blog waved a white flag, noting it was experiencing some “network stress.”
“To free up capacity for more…Fring-to-Fring video calling, we are
temporarily reducing support to 3rd-party Skype,” a blogger named Tom
posted July 9.
While the VOIP (voice over IP) company launched a free video-calling app for the iPhone in December 2009,
its newest software adds the ability for iPhone 4 owners to video chat
with friends on different platforms, including one-way video calls to
owners of the iPhone 3GS, with its single camera.
The new app also allows for multitasking — running in the background
while iPhone 4 users see to other tasks. There’s also a new Social
Stream, described by Fring as “a chronological stream of all Tweets,
Facebook updates, chats and calls, all in one place with easy,
cross-community communication and simple sorting capabilities.”
Additionally, the newest version includes a “smarter address book,”
says the company, that’s able to better manage a user’s buddy lists and
contacts.
"We are thrilled to bring iPhone users unrestricted video calling
with all their friends and family. Ever since we launched the world’s
first mobile video calling last year, we see millions of users thirsty
to share richer communication experiences,” Fring CEO Avi Shechter said
in a July 8 statement. “We’re proud to facilitate this face-to-face
mobile communication experience among friends wherever they are and
wherever their friends are on smartphones."
Fring’s apps require no additional hardware, are PC- and
geography-independent, and are available for platforms including the
iPod touch, Android, Symbian S60, Windows Mobile, J2ME, Linux an MeeGo.
According to the company, half a million new users sign up each month.
Like the iPhone 4, a number of new smartphones include a second,
front-facing camera, included specifically for video chatting over
programs such as Fring. The
HTC Evo 4G, on the Sprint network, complements its rear-facing
8-megapixel with a front-facing, 1.3-megapixel model for chatting. The Samsung Epic 4G, slated to become Sprint’s second 4G-enabled phone, likewise features a second camera.
At an event in June, Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha told members of the
media that Motorola is planning to introduce two to four phones in 2010
that will include front-facing cameras for video chatting.
Jha reportedly admittedly that he personally had “never been a great
believer” in consumer demand for the technology. Millions of Fring fans
now have a new way to tell him otherwise.