Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by brabel 551 days ago
I’m still using it. Why would anyone laugh, it still does what it’s always done.
2 comments

I guess it depends on how you view it.

For me, it stopped doing what it always did for me, when MS bought it.

It used to be dead simple, make calls on shitty airport wifi. Chat messaging that worked reliably.

I used it for dead simple group messaging at work and personal use - desktop, laptop, phone. Send a message and it'd arrive.

Then in something like 2015 that all started to break. I'd send a message from one computer, and it'd only deliver to one of the recipient's devices. Then the replies from that device would only go to one of mine.

Neither had complete message history. Sometimes they would sync up, but then other times not.

It resulted in an argument with someone who thought I was slacking off and ignoring them. It took comparing message history in person to find out that half the messages I sent them were not on their device and vice versa. Even signing out/in again didn't show the missing messages.

Calls started doing similar things where I'd call someone, it'd time out. I'd message them asking to call me back when they were ready, only to find out that they hadn't seen the call come through at all and were waiting for me to be ready.

Eventually we gave up on it for work - moved over to Slack for messaging and something else for voice when we needed it (This was before Slack had voice functions).

The few friends I still spoke to on Skype went over to something else, too.

So, if someone suggested connecting using Skype I wouldn't laugh at them, but I also would suggest just about anything else.

> Then in something like 2015 that all started to break.

Interesting. For me it just always worked, and continues to do so, so I have zero reason to tell all my releatives to stop using it.

Some relatives are on Whatsapp so I unfortunately have to use that as well. I also use Viber as a backup comms channel with part of the family as well , as sometimes that's the only thing that works.

> Eventually we gave up on it for work

Right, I haven't used it at work for a long time. We did use it at some point, but video calls on it with multiple people were just horrible... which is why Zoom took over everyone else as it just worked and everything else, including Slack, did not work almost at all.

I was just saying that, for family calls, Skype for me has been great and I guess your impression of it is outdated. It's a pretty good tool and I would laugh at anyone that thinks otherwise just to be mean back at them :D.

It's what my mum's learned to use, so it still has a place in my life.

The credit is useful when she's not on skype and I can use a few cents (if that) to dial her landline from the other side of the world and say "Hey, turn your computer on!". It's true this is no longer that special - I get a few hours international calls for free with my mobile plan these days so I don't need-need skype for it.

I imagine the reason they want to move to a subscription model is that there are too many people like me - $10 credit lasts a few years and probably represents a liability on their books as well as a customer they aren't getting any more money from for some time.

I'm the same, I buy $5 in credit and it lasts me a few years. It comes in handy when traveling or when calling foreign numbers.
Yea, that’s the issue discussed here. They removed this feature. You can’t use them for the occasional landline calls anymore.