By
David Meyer
Wednesday, May 17 2006 10:18 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,39360282,00.htm
A senior manager at Skype has called on mobile network
operators to stop seeing the VoIP (voice over IP) provider as the enemy, whilst
admitting that it will make a big push into the mobile space over the next year.
Speaking at the Wireless Event in London on Tuesday, Skype's
head of business development, Eric Lagier, told delegates his company sees
network operators as essential partners--even though its ultimate aim was to be "network agnostic".
"It is for us to educate the operators about the use of
Skype so that they don't see us as the enemy," Lagier said. "We are providing
users of their network. Eventually they will see that [they have] to give their
users a choice."
T-Mobile recently banned users of its new HSDPA-ready
datacard from using VoIP or IM clients through the network. Hutchison's 3
service, on the other hand, signed a partnership deal with Skype earlier this
year.
3G services form an integral part of the company's mobile
ambitions, but Lagier admitted that Skype was having problems with 3G's indoor
connection quality so far.
"HSDPA will help, but we have realized that we need to look
into ways of how to deliver Skype independently of the networks," he said.
Lagier then went on to describe how Skype had made a
significant investment with Google in building a global Wi-Fi network, claiming:
"Over time, we will connect [to] a network globally for free."
Lagier claimed that Skype is gaining 220,000 users per day,
and described the next year as "where we really start to venture into the mobile space".
"We are currently working with Nokia to develop a
Skype-friendly phone," he said by way of example. He also cited a similar
collaboration with Motorola on a Linux-based handset.
The "endgame", Lagier said, was to provide future users a
dual-mode phone with the ability to use a single number and identity, whether
for instant messaging, VoIP, video or e-mail.