Skype headed for your television screen

Skype opened up its translation software to all users on Tuesday.

Skype opened up its translation software to all users on Tuesday.

Published Jul 5, 2011

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In the future, believing that the TV is talking to you might not be a sign of insanity. You may be getting a Skype video call.

Comcast is set to announce that it plans to bring Skype calls to TV sets later this year.

Subscribers will be able to rent a kit from Comcast that includes a webcam and an adapter that plugs into the TV. A new remote control will include a keyboard on the back, for typing chat messages.

Philadelphia firm Comcast has not yet worked out what to charge for the kit, according to Catherine Avgiris, general manager of communications and data services.

Financial terms of the partnership between Comcast and Skype were not disclosed. Comcast would not say whether Skype would get some of what Comcast charges for the kit.

Subscribers will get notifications of incoming calls on their TVs and will be able to answer calls with full-screen video or in a window while watching TV.

Comcast plans to start trials of the system in the next few months. The company has 17.4 million internet subscribers.

Many high-end TVs already come with the ability to conduct Skype calls. Buyers usually have to add a webcam for $150 (R1 000), but neither the TV maker nor Skype charges a monthly fee.

“We’ve seen an explosion, already, in the use of Skype in the living room,” said Neil Stevens, general manager of consumer services at Skype.

Comcast’s Skype adapter won’t work with Skype services that let users call phone numbers, or receive calls to a phone number. Instead, Comcast plans to bundle a limited version of Skype’s offerings with its own phone service, for which it charges $20 per month and up, to the adapter, so subscribers can place and receive phone calls through the TV set. That’s a feature it plans to add later, according to Comcast spokesman Peter Dobrow.

Skype has agreed to be bought by Microsoft, the world’s biggest software maker, for $8.5 billion in a deal expected to close by the end of the year. – Sapa-AP

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