Microsoft seen not to blame for Skype rejecting open source company

Golvin says it is conceivable that Microsoft might avoid new partnerships with companies whose products compete directly against Microsoft.

But Elliot says he thinks Microsoft is likely to expand the number of platforms Skype works on. “They would like to have as many companies interact with Skype as possible,” Elliot says.

 

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A problem might arise, though, if Microsoft competitors decide to back out of current integrations with Skype because of their rivalries with Microsoft, he says.

Companies like Cisco and Avaya make SIP trunks that are compatible with Skype, but “if the Skype-compatible trunks become something that is competitively advantageous for Microsoft, they might be a little less enthusiastic,” Elliot says.

Still, Elliot says Cisco and Avaya are more likely than not to preserve Skype integration.

Microsoft, of course, will do its best to integrate Skype functionality into products like Office and Lync, its unified communications platform, which competes against Cisco and Avaya.

Although Skype has primarily been a consumer brand, Elliot says he expects “that Skype will offer a premium, business-oriented service that includes the rich presence, various federation and security services, the kinds of things that enterprises want.”

Keeping Skype open to competitors would not harm Lync — it would make it easier for Lync customers to communicate with non-Lync users, Elliot says.

Skype is expected to become a Microsoft division, led by Skype CEO Tony Bates, as opposed to being swallowed up into another product division.

In a short analysis published May 12, Gartner analysts wrote that “Skype’s independent position, which Gartner expects it to maintain for at least three to four years, will allow it to continue relationships with Microsoft competitors Avaya and Cisco, as well as other mobile platform vendors.” (See also: “Microsoft’s top 12 rivals”)

Why Sprint Chose Google Wallet Over Isis

Last November, one phone carrier was missing from the “Big Four” when three of America’s biggest carriers aligned to form Isis, a mobile payment platform: Sprint.

Sneaky ol’ Sprint. Turns out America’s fourth largest carrier was being courted by Google to join a Google-led mobile payments ecosystem, Google Wallet, announced on Thursday. Google, Sprint, and a slew of other financial companies had suddenly formed a formidable competitor to Isis, which was, until then, perceived as America’s best chance at making mobile payments widespread.

 

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On the fringe of yesterday’s event, Fared Adib, Sprint’s Vice President of Product Development (right), explained why Sprint shunned Isis for Google Wallet.

Sprint VP Fared Adib “The reason why we joined this group of companies was really its open philosophy, the ability to bring together multiple different players,” said Adib. “Google had the credit card networks, the processors, merchants, everyone already signed up.”

To clarify, it had one member from each of these industries signed up: Citi, MasterCard, Sprint, and First Data, to be precise. However Google stressed its desire to work with more companies. At the event yesterday, Stephanie Tilenius, Google’s VP of Commerce, expressed interest in partnering with “iPhone, RIM, and Microsoft.”

Adib said he was also excited by the immediacy of Google’s plan.

“This is not just something we’re testing two years from now in one city,” he said, snubbing Isis’ recent announcement about launching in Salt Lake City in 2012. “We’re trialing it today and deploying it in the market very soon.”

On the outset, partnering with Google puts Sprint in an excellent position, seeing that it carries the only phone that will be able to use the Google Wallet app when it launches this summer: the Nexus S 4G ($199 with contract, 3 stars).

Not even the original, NFC-equipped Google Nexus S phone on T-Mobile ($199 with contract, 3 stars), will be able to use it.

“Technically [T-Mobile’s Nexus S] could be because it has the NFC chip, but T-mobile is part of Isis, so if they wanted to be part Google Wallet they would have to talk to Google too,” said Adib.

Which highlights the limitations of Google Wallet: unless other companies agree to Google’s terms of use, very few people will actually be able to use Google Wallet—and only if they buy that particular Sprint phone. Sprint hasn’t released sales figures of the Nexus S 4G (and Adib would only say that it’s been one of Sprint’s top-selling products to date) but presumably it’s sold far less in its first three weeks than, say, the three million iPhone 4 units AT&T sold in the same amount of time last year.

And of those Nexus S 4G owners, what percentage also use a Citi MasterCard credit card and shop at American Eagle Outfitters?

Until more carriers, phones, banks, and merchants join Google’s ecosystem, there may yet be plenty of catch-up time for Isis, which declined to comment for this story. “When we launch next year consumers will be able to choose from multiple NFC handsets, from multiple operating systems, and from multiple manufacturers,” Jaymee Johnson, Isis spokesman, said to PCMag recently.

Since November Isis has revamped its purpose of creating an independent mobile payments processor to becoming a mobile payments “manager” that works with any bank, carrier or phone manufacturer—which is exactly how Google describes Google Wallet.

For more, see our hands-on with Google Wallet. Also be sure to read “Is Google Wallet What Mobile Payments Need to Succeed?”

New Gmail Widget Tells You All About the People You’re Emailing

Google has introduced the people widget, a new Gmail feature that adds contextual information about those with whom you exchange email.

 

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During the next two weeks, Google will roll out the new feature. It will appear on the right side of the Gmail interface and shows a picture of the person whose email you’re reading, a short paragraph summarizing the last email you received from that person, subjects from emails from the past month, an abbreviated calendar showing availability, and documents that person has recently created.

If you’re engaged in a group email conversation or a Google chat, all those participating will be listed along the right side, and above them will be icons leading you to a variety of ways to communicate with them, including chat, email, calendar events and phone calls.

This feature hasn’t arrived on our Gmail interface yet, but we’re eager to try it. It looks like a quick and efficient way to get your bearings when you receive an email.