Topic: T-Mobile launches voice chat for Facebook | |
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April 19, 2011 11:00 AM PDT
T-Mobile USA wants to offer more than cell phone service. The company is getting into the voice over IP market with a new application that will allow people to make voice calls from Facebook. T-Mobile's new VoIP app allows people to make phone calls from inside Facebook Chat. (Credit: T-Mobile USA) T-Mobile USA today announced the Bobsled by T-Mobile service, which will offer voice calls via Facebook. This new application will provide Facebook's more than 500 million users worldwide with free, one-touch calling to their Facebook friends from a personal computer and through the social platform's chat window.It's available now for download here. T-Mobile's move to expand its service offering is yet another indication that the company is not idly waiting for regulators to approve AT&T's bid to buy the company. Last month, AT&T said it would spend $39 billion to acquire T-Mobile USA, which is owned by German telecommunications provider Deutsche Telekom. The acquisition will pair No. 2 carrier AT&T with No. 4 carrier T-Mobile to create the largest wireless operator in the nation. Regulators have vowed to examine the deal closely. Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20055304-266.html#ixzz1K0Lnj1NA |
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Competitor Sprint Nextel and some consumer advocates want the deal blocked. The regulatory review process will likely take at least a year and could take up to 18 months to complete. In the meantime, it looks as though T-Mobile is moving forward with new offerings.
In addition to making live voice calls, the new Bobsled app will allow Facebook users to send voice messages to their friends either privately or via their "walls." T-Mobile said the Bobsled application for Facebook is available starting today as a free download for all Facebook users, regardless of whether they are also a T-Mobile cell phone subscriber or not. Once the app is downloaded, customers can place voice calls to their friends through the Facebook Chat window with a single click. The service is very similar to Skype, which also allows free calling over the Internet. Skype users also initiate Skype calls to other Skype users by clicking on a screen name. T-Mobile believes having the feature integrated into Facebook is helpful since people can simply initiate a call by clicking on someone's name rather than having to remember their Skype handle. But the Facebook chat feature is just beginning, T-Mobile execs say. The company has broader ambitions for its Bobsled service. The Bobsled platform will also power T-Mobile's Group Text and Cloud Text applications on the new T-Mobile Sidekick 4G, the company says. The Group Text feature lets subscribers create, name, manage and participate in reply-all group text conversations. The Cloud Text service allows customers to text from other platforms, such as a PC or tablet. T-Mobile also plans to add other features, such as video chat, the ability to place calls to a mobile phone of landline, and it will also offer apps on smartphones and tablets across mobile platforms regardless of the carrier. It's unclear if the new services that T-Mobile is introducing now as part of Bobsled will become a part of the AT&T service if the merger is approved by regulators. But what is certain is that T-Mobile is still trying to innovate and offer new services to keep its business afloat and attract new users. T-Mobile has always been a price leader in the U.S. mobile market, undercutting its competition in an attempt to attract new subscribers. Last week, the company announced a new "unlimited" voice, data and texting that undercuts its competition by at least $20 a month. "We are competing and innovating everyday to build the best asset we can no matter who the shareholders are," said T-Mobile senior Vice President Brad Duea. "And whoever owns us will have to evaluate whether to proceed with certain products and services. But for our customers, the new service is risk free. It's a free app that can be downloaded." Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20055304-266.html#ixzz1K0MJ2sNv |
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Marguerite Reardon has been a CNET News reporter since 2004, covering cell phone services, broadband, citywide Wi-Fi, the Net neutrality debate, as well as the ongoing consolidation of the phone companies.
Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20055304-266.html#ixzz1K0NBoNFw |
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Edited by
Atlantis75
on
Sat 04/30/11 12:46 PM
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Isn't this a little too late?
Tmobile USA has been bought up by AT&T, and although they still operate as a separate mobile company, by the end of the year, they will be integrated into the borg...I mean AT&T. I hate this. It's only AT&T now which is a pure GSM network provider. Now, they can raise their prices out of the roof, along with Verzion. Pure evil. |
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Soon, we'll have a utopia of just a handful of companies- AT&T, BP, US Government... doing away with idealistic 'fair trade' and pesky competative markets.
Without those distractions, companies can focus on our best interests. |
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And here we go-
http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/04/att-broadband-caps/ That's AT&T wanting us to get the heck off the net and go for walks, read books and have family nights. It's heart-warming that such a big company cares so much. If I were an AT&T user, I'd completely drop their service to let them know how totally on board I am. If you have AT&T, show them some love and let them know that you, also, are in favor of reading books, going for walks and family nights; DROP EM LIKE A HOT POTATO! |
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And here we go- http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/04/att-broadband-caps/ That's AT&T wanting us to get the heck off the net and go for walks, read books and have family nights. It's heart-warming that such a big company cares so much. If I were an AT&T user, I'd completely drop their service to let them know how totally on board I am. If you have AT&T, show them some love and let them know that you, also, are in favor of reading books, going for walks and family nights; DROP EM LIKE A HOT POTATO! I just noticed, they increased the termination fee to 325 dollars??? |
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I don't know if i'm that fussed about it, to be fair. What next? Simulators for social networks?
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I just noticed, they increased the termination fee to 325 dollars??? $325 ?! Holy cow! They gotcha coming and going! So, maybe AT&T really is EVIL...? |
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