Crossword clues for skype
skype
- Video conferencing choice
- Video chat service bought by Microsoft in 2011
- Video chat enabler
- Video chat company
- Video chat app
- Video calling app
- Talk over the Internet
- Provider of roughly a third of all international phone traffic
- Program used to talk with people over the Internet
- Program that allows face-to-face chatting
- Program often used for videoconferences
- Option for long-distance video chat
- Online voice calling service
- Online call company
- One choice for video chats
- Offerer of long-distance calls via Internet
- Modern free calling service
- Modern calling option
- Microsoft's calling service
- Microsoft-owned video-chatting program
- Microsoft purchase of 2011
- Microsoft acquisition of 2011
- Internet video conferencing aid
- Internet telephony provider
- Internet communication service
- Internet communication aid
- Internet calling service
- Have a spoken conversation over the internet
- Hangouts alternative
- Free video/phone/messaging service bought by Microsoft in 2011
- Digital communication company
- Conference call enabler
- Communication service with videoconferencing
- Chat facilitator
- Chat face-to-face?
- Big name in voice chat
- Big name in video chatting
- Apple FaceTime alternative
- Alternative to FaceTime or Google Hangouts
- Ring with a face attached?
- Make a call to see someone nowadays?
- Talk face-to-face?
- Modern alternative to the telephone
- Aid for a long-distance relationship
- Means of audio-visual connection
- In Scottish island, install parking app
- Have a spoken conversation via the internet
- Modern kind of call
- Elemental bit
- FaceTime alternative
- Video chat choice
- Zoom alternative
- Online call service
- Modern long-distance choice
- Alternative to FaceTime
- Video chatting option
- Video chat option
- Video chat format
- Video calling option
- Popular long-distance choice
- OoVoo alternative
- Microsoft's phone company
- Microsoft's calling company
- Internet communications company
- Internet chat option
- Internet calling service owned by Microsoft
- Google Talk alternative
- FaceTime competitor
- App for long-distance partners
- Webcam application
- Web phone service
- VOIP service bought by Microsoft in 2011
- Visual calling option
- Videoconferencing platform owned by Microsoft
- Video-chatting program
- Video-chat via computer
- Video-chat service
- Video date option
Wiktionary
alt. 1 (context transitive computing English) To make a telephone call using (w: Skype) software. 2 (context transitive computing English) To send a file with Skype. vb. 1 (context transitive computing English) To make a telephone call using (w: Skype) software. 2 (context transitive computing English) To send a file with Skype.
Wikipedia
Skype (stylized as skype) is an application that provides video chat and voice call services. Users may exchange such digital documents as images, text, video and any others, and may transmit both text and video messages. Skype allows the creation of video conference calls. Skype is available for Microsoft Windows, Macintosh, or Linux, as well as Android, Blackberry, and both Apple and Windows smartphones and tablets. Skype is based on a freemium model. Much of the service is free, but Skype Credit or a subscription is required to call a landline or a mobile phone number. At the end of 2010, there were over 660 million worldwide users, with over 300 million estimated active each month as of August 2015. At one point in February 2012, there were thirty four million users concurrently online on Skype.
First released in August 2003, Skype was created by the Swede Niklas Zennström and the Dane Janus Friis, in cooperation with Ahti Heinla, Priit Kasesalu, and Jaan Tallinn, Estonians who developed the backend that was also used in the music-sharing application Kazaa. In September 2005, eBay acquired Skype for $2.6 billion. In September 2009, Silver Lake, Andreessen Horowitz and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board announced the acquisition of 65% of Skype for $1.9 billion from eBay, which attributed to the enterprise a market value of $2.92 billion. Microsoft bought Skype in May 2011 for $8.5 billion. Its Skype division headquarters are in Luxembourg, but most of the development team and 44% of all the division's employees are still situated in Tallinn and Tartu, Estonia.
Skype allows users to communicate over the Internet by voice using a microphone, by video using a webcam, and by instant messaging. Skype-to-Skype calls to other users are free of charge, while calls to landline telephones and mobile phones (over traditional telephone networks) are charged via a debit-based user account system called Skype Credit. Some network administrators have banned Skype on corporate, government, home, and education networks, citing such reasons as inappropriate usage of resources, excessive bandwidth usage, and security concerns.
Skype originally featured a hybrid peer-to-peer and client–server system. Skype has been powered entirely by Microsoft-operated supernodes since May 2012. The 2013 mass surveillance disclosures revealed that Microsoft had granted intelligence agencies unfettered access to supernodes and Skype communication content.