- Oct 8, 2013
- 775
- 27
- 28
Something I've taken away from being stuck at home for weeks is a new found appreciation for just how bad skype has become.
Call me late to the party, but last week I had my first zoom call.
We had 4 people on the call, and I was expecting a horrible, broken up, laggy, audio/visual nightmare, because that's the bar that Skype has set for me for years.
4 people...two in the UK, one in the the USA and one in South Africa. The call quality was superb. I mean, absolutely superb. No lag, no call drop, no freezing visuals. It was as damn near close to having them in the room as I've ever experienced.
I thought it might have been a fluke. Maybe all our broadband stars aligned that day. So, just to be sure, I had another zoom call yesterday. 7 people, from all over the world. The call quality was mind blowing. It was so good I actually started to ask myself what sort of voodoo the zoom people must be practicing, because surely a video call with this many people should never be this good? It's impossible. Skype told me it couldn't be done. Skype told me that frozen screens, crappy audio and God-awful lagging is just a price we pay to be able to see and hear someone at the same time.
Well, turns out Skype lied.
I don't have much video calling experience. I've been fairly loyal to Skype for over a decade.
How has Zoom managed to get this good?
Or, more to the point, how and why has Skype gotten this bad?
Skype has been around for close to 20 years. They laid the groundwork that made video calling a thing that everyone could use. They owned the market. They were bought up by Microsoft and should have, in theory, been given access to all the cutting edge technology and big pots of cash nessecary to make them the platinum standard in video calling services.
Instead, it's a fractured mess of tangled services and layer-upon-layer of subscriptions, living on top of a system that's a joke when compared to zoom, or even whatsapp video calling.
How on earth has Microsoft's executives allowed skype to fall apart like this? They easly had a 15 year head start on zoom. What the heck have the technical team at Microsoft/Skype HQ been up to for all those years?
Call me late to the party, but last week I had my first zoom call.
We had 4 people on the call, and I was expecting a horrible, broken up, laggy, audio/visual nightmare, because that's the bar that Skype has set for me for years.
4 people...two in the UK, one in the the USA and one in South Africa. The call quality was superb. I mean, absolutely superb. No lag, no call drop, no freezing visuals. It was as damn near close to having them in the room as I've ever experienced.
I thought it might have been a fluke. Maybe all our broadband stars aligned that day. So, just to be sure, I had another zoom call yesterday. 7 people, from all over the world. The call quality was mind blowing. It was so good I actually started to ask myself what sort of voodoo the zoom people must be practicing, because surely a video call with this many people should never be this good? It's impossible. Skype told me it couldn't be done. Skype told me that frozen screens, crappy audio and God-awful lagging is just a price we pay to be able to see and hear someone at the same time.
Well, turns out Skype lied.
I don't have much video calling experience. I've been fairly loyal to Skype for over a decade.
How has Zoom managed to get this good?
Or, more to the point, how and why has Skype gotten this bad?
Skype has been around for close to 20 years. They laid the groundwork that made video calling a thing that everyone could use. They owned the market. They were bought up by Microsoft and should have, in theory, been given access to all the cutting edge technology and big pots of cash nessecary to make them the platinum standard in video calling services.
Instead, it's a fractured mess of tangled services and layer-upon-layer of subscriptions, living on top of a system that's a joke when compared to zoom, or even whatsapp video calling.
How on earth has Microsoft's executives allowed skype to fall apart like this? They easly had a 15 year head start on zoom. What the heck have the technical team at Microsoft/Skype HQ been up to for all those years?