But what I would tell you is that it's a software company that can iterate and move very quickly with the market. And I was lucky enough to be there when it was a much smaller company and see it go from kind of the revenues that Skype is approaching through to obviously tens of billions of dollars a year.
BATES: Yeah, I think, firstly, Cisco's a wonderful company. Why would you leave something like that, something that's known for a company where most of its users, as we said, get something for nothing they don't pay a cent? And you came from an established powerhouse in the tech industry, from Cisco Systems, which is pretty much a traditional company with a really sturdy business model, making money from the sale of hardware and software. You started as CEO just a few months ago. The reach is just the thing that I think is long-term differentiated for us.īLOCK: Tony Bates, you're a relative newcomer to Skype. Skype's available on a myriad of mobile phones. And just to share with you some statistics, in the first 24 hours, we had 4 million downloads and 1 million Skype video calls.Īnd I think what differentiates us is that universal nature of Skype. And we did it on New Year's Eve 'cause it's one of the most important video calling days of the year, maybe the most important day.
Message from skype ceo upgrade#
So that's an upgrade from what we had before in the marketplace. BATES: We launched our two-way video iPhone app. Mobile video is the next great area frontier for Skype.īLOCK: Do you think that you might be a little bit late to the mobile party? I mean, how do you rank among those competitors who are already really active in that? Qik really adds strength to our mobile video platform overall.
Message from skype ceo archive#
And so you can now capture the video, provide a link to a live feed up to say, 20 people, as well as then come back and look at that later in an archive sense. Qik is actually available in over 200 different mobile phones running across all of the major operating systems, Android, iOS, Symbian and so on.īut, also, Qik is also about capturing these moments that I talked about earlier. One, it allows us to reach a broad set of mobile devices. Firstly, as I mentioned, we think the next great sort of place to go is really sharing these magical moments that we talked about in a mobile context. BATES: Well, I would says two parts about that. How does acquiring Qik help Skype? Is that a new model? It lets users stream video from their smartphones. So people are using it for both magical sort of wonderful moments, but more importantly, also useful moments.īLOCK: Let's talk a bit about the company that Skype recently acquired for $100 million and that's Qik. Folks who are watching real time what's - maybe in Tulsa, watching what's happening, you know, in current events just like we've seen over the last few days in Tunisia. We hear these great use cases, you know, the Army ranger who's serving in Afghanistan who's watching the birth of their daughter back in the U.S.
You don't have to imagine anymore what's possible. And about 40 percent of those now are doing that with video. I think if you think about what Skype has done, and you mentioned some great numbers, but just to give you a couple of other data points, we on average per month have about - in the last three months we were hitting 145 million connected users who use the service in one way or another. BATES: I think that's a great metaphor for Skype, actually, because what Skype really tries to stand for and what we've been doing, as you mentioned, from the advent of when we were really just focused on audio and taking it to video is really create something that we think is both universal, but also wonderful in terms of experiences that we enable.īLOCK: So, take a deep breath meaning this is going to take your breath away or where is that metaphor heading? TONY BATES (CEO, Skype): Thank you, Melissa, it's great to be here.īLOCK: What about that message, take a deep breath, what does that mean? Well, joining us from London to talk about his company is Skype's CEO Tony Bates. Today Skype has about 560 million registered users and most of them don't pay a dime for their service.
With the program you can use your Internet connection to make voice calls, video calls, as well send instant messages. Skype was founded in 2003 as an alternative to expensive phone plans. Those four words are the first thing you see when you launch the desktop application for Skype, the company that helped pioneer a marriage between the telephone and the Internet. I'm Melissa Block.Īnd it's time now for All Tech Considered.īLOCK: Take a deep breath. From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED.