Tagged: Skype

FaceTime calls are encrypted, HIPAA compliant | TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

FaceTime calls are encrypted, HIPAA compliant | TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog. This is fantastic. Now this will be an easy sell in a corporate environment. With Skypes recent security problems, makes this announcement even sweeter.

Share

Facetime vs Skype

You are so beatiful...
Image by Thundershead via Flickr

Why would i use Facetime over Skype?: Apple Support Communities. This is a nice summary and good list of the pros/cons of different video conferencing software. Right now FaceTime is mostly used by consumers and small businesses, and Skype tends to be more popular for group chats and other more formal usage. I have used both and they are great.

Share

Mac Os Lion – Magic Mouse`s scroll…: Apple Support Communities

Image representing Skype as depicted in CrunchBase
Image via CrunchBase

Mac Os Lion – Magic Mouse`s scroll…: Apple Support Communities. Liam0s solved the issue.

Solved!

I had MultiClutch some time ago, and deleted it with bringing in Lion, but it has never cleared it out fully. This incompatible .bundle was causing the issue. I found the file in the Library of the computer, not your user library. I found in the Input Managers folder. I had some issues emptying the trash but a quick reboot and immediately empty gets the file out and your system back to the way it was.

I can scroll in Excel, Skype, everything!

That said, I haven’t put better touch tool back on yet, because I used to use two finger swipe to switch tabs. And I miss it, so I will report back when I put it on.

So happy to have my Magic Mouse back!

Share

Reviews: Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit | iLounge

Reviews: Apple iPad Camera Connection Kit | iLounge. Wow! I wish all reviews on the Internet were so through. Mr. Horwitz has crafted a piece of writing that gives you the pros/cons of this device. Even some non-sanctioned by currently working options like connecting a Skype headset. He made me want to buy this and test it out for compatibility with other devices.

Share

Researcher Finds Dangerous Vulnerability In Skype – Slashdot

LONDON - MAY 10:  In this handout provided by ...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Researcher Finds Dangerous Vulnerability In Skype – Slashdot. What is most troubling is how Skype thinks of this vulnerability:

Skype spokesperson Chaim Haas has responded in an email, calling the bug “a minor issue,” and writing that the company plans to implement a fix in an update next week. He adds that the issue only affects “top contacts,” which means anyone attempting to exploit the bug would have to be someone the target communicates with on a regular basis. “As you can imagine, someone who you deal with frequently is probably unlikely to take advantage of this bug anyways.” Haas writes

Share

Is email becoming less important for you?

Image representing Skype as depicted in CrunchBase
Image via CrunchBase

I ask because I just read an article that said that the number of online email jumped from around 4% in 2009, to 20% in 2010. I was thinking about this and my own history with email and I think I have some reasons why this is happening.

  1. Levels of spam. If you don’t have great spam filtering which most desktop clients do not, you tend to get stuck with a high garbage to useful email ratio. Online filtering has been better than any kind of spam filtering on the client side, even using highly regarded spam filtering products.
  2. Importance of email as a communications medium. Email has some good qualities, but I think that people are seeing the limits to sharing their data. Now with services like SugarSync, and cloud storage, one of the major reasons people use email (to move files) is becoming less important. People are creating videos on their phones/ipads/cameras and traditional email isn’t an easy way to transfer it. Most email providers have size limitations, and most people’s internet connections are not reliable/fast enough to make this process easy. So I think people are uploading their video to services like Dropbox or Google documents and sharing them from there.
  3. Rise of Twitter/social networks, plugins to text for free on smartphones. I think that the immediate and easy nature of these apps bypass the ability of marketers to spam their messages. People are learning to control what information they take in, just to be able to deal with all of the information they are asked to absorb. So naturally they want to eliminate things like advertisements in Gmail, or things like Aol/Hotmail advertisements as well. They are using plugins in their browser to secure their privacy, and putting their numbers on Do not Call lists. People are sick of being spammed with email “newsletters” that every website seems to assume they want when they only want to finish reading an article they found interesting.
  4. Email is an older application like Gopher, and like older applications, new generations want to explore new ways of communicating. With the mainstreaming of Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter, they are seeking new ways to connect. So apps that are mobile will probably be the new communication method. Younger people seem to like distributed and peer-to-peer applications that don’t depend on a central server to verify and maintain their information. Apps like Tiger text which provide anonymity I believe will grow even more popular.

I don’t see the death of email, since lots of older users like me find it easy. I do see it being subsumed by Skype, or other online video like FaceTime that is only a component of their full services. One day typing a message will seem as quaint as using a telegraph machine. Kids will ask, did you really have to “type” out messages? Why didn’t voice recognition just send it? Why indeed?

Share

Is Microsoft trying to end the reign of mobile carriers? (MSFT Skype Nokia)… – StumbleUpon

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MAY 10:  Microsoft CEO Ste...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Is Microsoft trying to end the reign of mobile carriers? (MSFT Skype Nokia)… – StumbleUpon. Makes sense what he is saying. Is this Google’s long-term plan? Interesting perspective isn’t it? I don’t credit that MS has that kind of plan. They have trouble executing on the small things.

Share