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submitted 2 days ago by alyaza@beehaw.org to c/technology@beehaw.org

Skype, the online video-calling service, is shutting down in May after more than two decades of service. For those of a certain generation, Skype changed everything.

Before it launched in 2003, making international calls 📱 was prohibitively expensive and few viable digital alternatives existed. Skype offered users a cheap and easy way to call anyone in the world, skirting the draconian landline industry. When Skype added video calls a few years later, it felt as if the future had arrived: Students used Skype to stay connected to families back home 🤙, international friendships were born 🤝, and a generation of cross-border relationships began ❤️ — or ended 💔 — over the service. By the late 2000s, Skype was so ubiquitous that its name became a verb, much like Xerox and Google. Its bouncy ringtones and audio notifications were iconic. 🎶

At its peak, Skype had about 300 million users around the world. But it was a product of the desktop era, and as users went mobile, Skype lost its edge to upstarts like WhatsApp and FaceTime. Today, the app is forgotten on most phones and computers, particularly in the West. ⏰

The platform still has dedicated pockets of users in countries like Turkey, Russia, India, and the Philippines, according to market intelligence firm Sensor Tower. “Skype has been an integral part of shaping modern communications and supporting countless meaningful moments,” Microsoft said in a blog post announcing its imminent shutdown. 😴

Before Skype goes the way of other early internet icons like AOL Instant Messenger and Friendster, Rest of World readers shared their favorite memories of the service. Here are their stories. 🙇

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[-] corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 day ago

Skype is still a very good voice chat app, despite a succession of cluttered and pointless updates. It's clear and clean in sound, and has an excellent gain tuner.

I will use it until the day it dies, and then switch to WhatsApp or something else. It's all shit by comparison, so I'm not too chuffed as to where I go. Yeah, it's all junk.

But with my contacts on Whatsapp, signal, teams, slack, and zoom, this feels so much like the pre-jabber days where pidgin was the only sane app. Now we don't even have that.

This is lame.

[-] jagged_circle@feddit.nl 4 points 1 day ago

You can't call regular phone lines with WhatsApp, teams, slack, or zoom. None of those are replacements for sjyoe.

[-] greybeard@lemmy.one 3 points 1 day ago

Teams, as a business product, does actually offer phone service. It is a special license though and from what I hear people managing it hate it, even though users tend to like it.

[-] jagged_circle@feddit.nl 1 points 1 day ago

Does it require a monthly fee? Does it cost the same as Skype? Skype was like less than ten cents per minute, pay as you go.

[-] greybeard@lemmy.one 2 points 1 day ago

Oh yes, and it is really only a business feature. It isn't competing with Skype. It is actually hard for me to think of Teams as something non-business users are supposed to use.

this post was submitted on 26 Apr 2025
83 points (100.0% liked)

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