It's the end of an era as Microsoft announces it's shutting down Skype. Here's what you need to know about this.
You can now share your iPhone or Android screen on Skype mobile app. Here's everything you need to know about this.
Skype finally adds call recording feature on iPhone, iPad and Mac, with support for Windows 10 coming soon. Here's everything you need to know about it.
Skype has today updated its iOS app to take advantage of some of the new features and APIs that iOS 10 brought to the iPhone. Available to download as a free update or as a full download, the updated Skype iOS app now features support for things like CallKit, allowing the app to behave in just the same way as the built-in Phone app.
Real-world test shows which popular iOS apps are guilty of unduly and negatively affecting iPhone battery life, and while some are quite obvious in hindsight, others are less glaring.
Microsoft has shown continual willing to build on the user-experience that is thrust into the face of users when interacting with Skype. Since purchasing the company back in 2011, the company has pumped significant resources into ensuring that the whole platform is as smooth and seamless as possible for those who interact with it on a daily basis. Part of that development has focused on overhauling and improving the customer-facing mobile apps on iOS and Android, which has now been updated with a new group video calling experience for up to 25 people that was originally teased back in January.
Microsoft has today released an updated version of its Skype app for iPhone and iPad via the iOS App Store. In addition to offering the standard bug fixes and general performance improvements that every update seems to bring to any app, the latest version of Skype also packs a number of enhancements that take advantage of Apple's recently introduced iOS 9 platform. Version 6.3 of Skype is now available to download immediately from the App Store.
This message bug can crash Skype app for Windows, iOS, Android. Here's how to fix it right away.
Microsoft has just introduced a new beta version of Skype that operates seamlessly through the Web, enabling users to communicate from the comfort of their browsers. It's not quite ready for the masses yet, with only a few hand picked users new and existing being pulled into the beta program, but all going well, it should be available to the wider audience in a matter of a few months.
A few days back, Skype introduced some revamped features for its desktop client, with a distinct focus on improving the user's instant messaging experience. So while Skype is busy improving the users' experience on both, the mobile and desktop version of its app, let us introduce you to Skype Qik. Taking a distinctly different route than Skype, Skype Qik is built for asynchronous video messaging, where you create and share video messages with online and offline users. The app gives you a slight peek into what Skype may have looked like had it started out as an app for the mobile.