Skype is the AIM of VoIP. In other words Skype is the devil. Engadget: you're pretty hip to a lot of cool things like Ubuntu, DRM issues, etc, yet you keep promoting the most awful, proprietary centrally-controlled VoIP there is. Please stop!
...and you are the AIM of Engadget posters. I use Skype to keep in touch with people all over the world including my family, for free. I am very thankful for the Skype service.
I read that list and yeah it looks pretty shitty but the fact is that a ton of people use it (me included) and it's not engadget's job to police content based on concerns like these. it is their job to report gadget-based news that folks like us want to read. they certainly aren't jumping up and down and saying "use skype". you should stick to informing us of your admittedly interesting concerns and not slagging off websites whose job it is to report this stuff. i'm not going to stop using it even after reading that list. sorry.
Bah.. Engadget, please get some usability on your message system (I'm sure I clicked reply but post showed up on its own).
I gotta side with Aarron on this one. He's basically saying "there are better alternatives to Windows," and you guys are saying "But I use Windows!" Basically Engadget has the opportunity to turn people towards a better product using a fairer protocol.
whether or not they have the opportunity is irrelevant. we don't come here to be preached to about what some folk think is "better" than what's out there. we come here to be informed about everything equally and make our own choices. the comments section is where people can raise their own private issues but it's not right to criticize engadget for reporting on things you may not be keen on personally.
I'm sure that Skype is all well and good when it works. If it works. And the wind is blowing in the right direction. Vonage, anyone? Also good for contacting family spread around the world. Certainly get more features, quality, and reliability.
...and if it ties itself to Windows updates and suffers cascading failures because no one else can run servers with their protocols, then it /doesn't/ work. Get me?
you're missing the point dude. no-one's saying they shouldn't talk about this, that or whatever. exactly the opposite. they should report on everything. even the stuff you don't personally care for.
As you say, "we come here to be informed about everything equally and make our own choices." I agree, but in the case of Skype, I don't think Engadget is adequately informing its readers of the serious problems and threats presented. I'm not saying that Engadget should stop talking about Skype altogether, but rather that they should temper the hype with by weighing the pros and cons of that system.
I am confident that the problems with Skype will eventually become known to the general public and that the world will reject Skype in favor of more open, secure, decentralized technologies. In that sense, proprietary hardware products such as this one represent an environmental problem and a misuse of natural resources, because when the world drops Skype, we wont simply be able to make these devices talk Jabber or SIP. Instead we'll throw them in the trash.
Appreciate the response, it's nice to get some disagreement that's actually civilized for a change. I read the stuff and I take what you have to add with no problems. It sounds like you have a very valid point. However, it's a very fine line between reporting the facts on a new gadget impartially and then stepping over that line to offer a social commentary on it. I have absolutely no problem with people voicing their concerns about Skype or whoever in the comments and informing us of those concerns (I learnt a lot about Skype I didn't know today) but my original comment was in response to your request to stop reporting anything Skype-related. I don't personally see anything in the above article that's suggesting we drop what we're doing and use Skype, rather, it's a simple to-the-point piece about a new gadget that happens to be related to Skype. I, like probably most people, come here just to see what's new in the world. That said, maybe we could see an informative piece regarding Skype's problems from Ross Rubin?......that seems to be up his alley.
Anyway, I appreciate you probably didn't really mean stop reporting Skype stuff altogether, you were probably just trying to get a point across yourself.
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Skype is the AIM of VoIP. In other words Skype is the devil. Engadget: you're pretty hip to a lot of cool things like Ubuntu, DRM issues, etc, yet you keep promoting the most awful, proprietary centrally-controlled VoIP there is. Please stop!
Please see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skype#Criticisms
...and you are the AIM of Engadget posters. I use Skype to keep in touch with people all over the world including my family, for free. I am very thankful for the Skype service.
I read that list and yeah it looks pretty shitty but the fact is that a ton of people use it (me included) and it's not engadget's job to police content based on concerns like these. it is their job to report gadget-based news that folks like us want to read. they certainly aren't jumping up and down and saying "use skype". you should stick to informing us of your admittedly interesting concerns and not slagging off websites whose job it is to report this stuff. i'm not going to stop using it even after reading that list. sorry.
Bah.. Engadget, please get some usability on your message system (I'm sure I clicked reply but post showed up on its own).
I gotta side with Aarron on this one. He's basically saying "there are better alternatives to Windows," and you guys are saying "But I use Windows!" Basically Engadget has the opportunity to turn people towards a better product using a fairer protocol.
whether or not they have the opportunity is irrelevant. we don't come here to be preached to about what some folk think is "better" than what's out there. we come here to be informed about everything equally and make our own choices. the comments section is where people can raise their own private issues but it's not right to criticize engadget for reporting on things you may not be keen on personally.
You're right, they should stop talking about Ubuntu, charity drives, and anything that's just emerging too, and just stick to ??????
I'm sure that Skype is all well and good when it works. If it works. And the wind is blowing in the right direction. Vonage, anyone? Also good for contacting family spread around the world. Certainly get more features, quality, and reliability.
...and if it ties itself to Windows updates and suffers cascading failures because no one else can run servers with their protocols, then it /doesn't/ work. Get me?
Keep it open. Wengo.
@ heh
you're missing the point dude. no-one's saying they shouldn't talk about this, that or whatever. exactly the opposite. they should report on everything. even the stuff you don't personally care for.
Simon P,
As you say, "we come here to be informed about everything equally and make our own choices." I agree, but in the case of Skype, I don't think Engadget is adequately informing its readers of the serious problems and threats presented. I'm not saying that Engadget should stop talking about Skype altogether, but rather that they should temper the hype with by weighing the pros and cons of that system.
I am confident that the problems with Skype will eventually become known to the general public and that the world will reject Skype in favor of more open, secure, decentralized technologies. In that sense, proprietary hardware products such as this one represent an environmental problem and a misuse of natural resources, because when the world drops Skype, we wont simply be able to make these devices talk Jabber or SIP. Instead we'll throw them in the trash.
Aaron,
Appreciate the response, it's nice to get some disagreement that's actually civilized for a change. I read the stuff and I take what you have to add with no problems. It sounds like you have a very valid point. However, it's a very fine line between reporting the facts on a new gadget impartially and then stepping over that line to offer a social commentary on it. I have absolutely no problem with people voicing their concerns about Skype or whoever in the comments and informing us of those concerns (I learnt a lot about Skype I didn't know today) but my original comment was in response to your request to stop reporting anything Skype-related. I don't personally see anything in the above article that's suggesting we drop what we're doing and use Skype, rather, it's a simple to-the-point piece about a new gadget that happens to be related to Skype. I, like probably most people, come here just to see what's new in the world. That said, maybe we could see an informative piece regarding Skype's problems from Ross Rubin?......that seems to be up his alley.
Anyway, I appreciate you probably didn't really mean stop reporting Skype stuff altogether, you were probably just trying to get a point across yourself.