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Paperback Skype for Dummies Book

ISBN: 0470048913

ISBN13: 9780470048917

Skype for Dummies

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Book Overview

Here's the fun and easy way to understand all the hype about Skype and make this cool alternative communication system work for you

People love Skype because it's fairly simple to use, it's free, it doesn't have advertisements or pop-up screens, and its communications are encrypted and secure. If you want the ability to make free voice calls or want to maximize Skype and get the most out of this free global telephony system, you've...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Skype Hype

I was interested in Skype only for video conferencing on a Macintosh computer, in order to connect with a Windows machine across the state. It all worked just as the book said it would, so I was quite pleased with it. I did not investigate the telephone capacities. I would recommend the book for anyone approaching Skype for the first time.

Good for newbies and experienced Skypers alike...

Skype is one of those applications that has completely rewritten the rules of an industry. No more does the phone company hold sway over who you can and can't communicate with, as well as how much it is going to cost you. Skype for Dummies by Loren & Susan Abdulezer and Howard Dammond gives an excellent guide to the product, as well as to many of the add-ons that regular users may not be aware of... Contents: Part 1 - Getting Started with Skype: What's All the Hoopla about Skype?; Hooking Up with Skype; Getting Familiar with Skype's Interface Part 2 - As You Like It - Skype Your Way: Customizing Skype Options to Suit Your Style; Getting Personal; The Mad Chatter; Skyping Eye to Eye - Skype with Video; The Ins and Outs of SkypeIn and SkypeOut Part 3 - Calling All Seasoned Skypers: Managing Your Messages; Partying On - On the Conference Line!; Spicing Things Up with Great Gadgets and Add-Ons Part 4 - The Professional Skyper: "Skypifying" Your Business; Exploring Skype Communities; Skypecasting Part 5 - The Part of Tens: Ten Reasons Your Mom (and Other Family) Will Love Skype; (Almost) Ten Ways to Promote Your Business Using Skype; Ten Ways to Use Skype at School Appendix A: Skype Multilanguage Support; Appendix B: Skype Tips and Tricks Guide; Index For the person who has never used Skype and doesn't know about VoIP telephony, this is a perfect, non-threatening introduction. There's enough background on why Skype is important and how it works without descending into complete geek-speak. The authors take you through download, installation, configuration, and your first call. If that's all it did, the book would be OK for a certain target audience, but fortunately it goes beyond that. For people beyond the basics, you'll find out about conference calling as well as other third-party add-ons to the Skype product. For instance, Pamela is an add-on that record calls, remind you of personal details about the person you're calling, and various other nice items. I downloaded and installed it, and it's a nice addition. I also didn't know about designing your own avatar for viewing on Skype. Granted, avatars are not exactly mission-critical, must-have features, but it was fun to do and would have remained hidden to me without a book such as this bringing it to my attention. My particular occupation (software development) and profession keeps me in regular contact with friends all over the world. Without Skype, I'd be restricted to email or instant messages. Reading this book has reinforced the need to keep my headset plugged in and nearby for incoming Skype calls. It's also motivated me to check out getting a webcam for video chatting. That will shrink my world even further. Yes, I could find out about all this stuff in Skype without reading a book. But having Skype for Dummies at hand made it much easier to review what I didn't know about the software, as well as tweaking my work setup to take better advantage of it. Good book, and defi

A note from Susan (one of the authors!)

Okay, I had to give it 5 stars since I co-wrote the book and I know all the research, reflection, editing and late nights that went into Skype for Dummies. But I also wanted to add a little personal note about Skype and why I wanted to write this book. Skype is an amazing way to communicate. I don't use it exclusively (I use land lines, email and cell phones too). But I wanted to open up the possibilities of using a program that let's you talk, type in messages, conference, videoconference, transfer files all at the same time, in the same venue, exploding the idea of what it means to mingle electronically. My husband Loren (my co-author), and our friend Howard Dammond (my other co-author), used Skype constantly in the writing work flow. We'd develop an outline and send the file out (you can send files out to a whole bunch of people at once if they are in a Skype chat or conference with you). We'd each look at it, comment, paste in paragraphs, changes, suggestions and add live links in the chat window, and then get down to work. Our work flow was almost exclusively on Skype. This was true even when Loren was in the study and I was in the living room in the same apartment. It was faster to Skype a file and paste a paragraph into a chat than it was to email or print and walk the chapter over to the next room. We really hadn't anticipated how efficient this was (and grateful for that efficiency when deadlines loomed). Skype had become part of our culture of communicating. We used it for work, play, to explore, to teach and to connect our far flung families. On any given day, while I'm at work writing or researching on my computer, a little alert comes up inviting me to answer a Skype call. Not unusual...but the call is from my mother, a new user to computers, and well into her eighties. Mom lives in Florida, I'm in New York, and her Skype contacts allow her to instantly call any of her children with a couple of clicks. She also uses landlines and cell phones, but the quality of a Skype call for her is much clearer...a boon to failing hearing. I coached my Mom in how to set up a contact list and how to Skype out to her brothers in Indiana and Virginia, and her nieces in California. She is a confident Skyper (although she calls it Spyke!) and absolutely took to the program because it made sense to use it. In the book we certainly tried to be really, really clear about how to use all the features of Skype...and then some (editors in the Dummies series are meticulous about insisting on clarity...albeit with a huge dose of humour). But we wanted to talk about the new culture that is emerging because of such programs; the enormity of how much more productive we can be if we take advantage of new tools; how far our reach can go in multi-continent collaboration, language learning, and business development. To me, Skype is personal. I use it every day. This book was not a platform for political, economic or ethical discussions on Skype, eBay, cable comp

useful, but be wary of eBay sellers using Skype

Skype is currently perhaps the most popular VoIP implementation out there. This book explains in simple terms how you can use it for free long distance phone calls, using the Internet. Of course, you can also make free local calls. But, at least in the US, for many users, the latter is moot. Since local phone companies often offer unlimited local calling at some low flat rate. The downloading and installation steps are easy to follow. If you want just to use the basics, then you don't even need to read all of the book. Very straightforward. But the text shows that the latest Skype now has some nice extra features. Notably conference calling and live video. The latter can be from Webcams, which have proved widely popular with many people, quite aside from any involvement with Skype. You can also handle SMS. In the US, note that SMS is not as heavily used as overseas, however. Another nice feature is voice messaging. Actually, what Skype is doing is mounting a direct challenge to the traditional PBX business, and well as video conferencing. Both usually have vendors offering expensive custom hardware. As least for you as an individual, the book shows how Skype gives a very affordable alternative. One slight drawback about the book is the lack of mention of VoIP. It is a "Dummies" book, and deliberately written to minimise jargon. But VoIP is one of these popular buzzwords that a layperson might have heard of, in conjunction with Skype. For example, if you google "Skype" and "voip", you find some 28 million results. Showing that VoIP is one of the most popular terms associated with Skype. So perhaps the book could at least have made a passing mention of it. There need not be a technical explanation of VoIP naturally; this is not that kind of book. Another drawback, and not so slight, has to do with the purchase of Skype by eBay. The book has a brief passage on this. Mentioning that buyers and sellers on eBay can now talk directly to each other. Too simplistic. It does not warn that this may actually be a bad thing. Of course, if you go to the Skype and eBay websites, there is little mention of the disadvantage of buyers and sellers talking to each other. The danger is that a seller offering fake (or nonexistent) goods can now use Skype to sweettalk buyers. This is WORSE than the previous situation, where the seller was restricted to providing a written description (plus images) in the sale page, and by possibly providing more details in email to buyers. Written descriptions are easier to parse, and are a written contract, against which the seller can be held to. Whereas spoken blandishments are a verbal contract. Notoriously hard to enforce, if these just depend on the conflicting memories of buyer and seller. (Which is why you always hear the phrase "get it in writing".) Sure, the buyer might record the conversation. But some [many?] won't. And if eBay/Skype records the conversation, this just increases their storage costs. If the book mentio
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