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Hands-on with Fring’s almost-free VoIP for the iPhone

Hands-on with Fring’s almost-free VoIP for the iPhone

This morning I’ve been playing with the prerelease version of Fring’s talk software for the iPhone. It enables users to place VoIP calls in place of their plan minutes, giving people a cheap international calling alternative to their carrier’s expensive per-minute charges. The one caveat (besides the need for a “jailbroken” handset) is that it requires the thick river of data only available over Wi-Fi, which means you won’t be able to make or receive VoIP calls without being in range of a hotspot.

Besides VoIP, the app excels in instant messaging. You can live text chat with buddies on MSN Live Messenger, ICQ, Google Talk, AIM, Yahoo, as well as post and read messages to and from Twitter. Fring also lets you do voice chat with MSN, Google Talk, and ICQ.

To instigate a call, you simply have to hit a large green call button after hitting a buddy’s name on the Fring contact list (see photo below). There’s no minute counter, hold button, or anything else you might be used to with a regular phone–it’s just a quick and dirty call that with a good connection sounds downright decent.

Fring Mobile

If a buddy is on one of the chat networks that includes voice chat, you can skip the finger strokes and use your voice instead.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

The one service I ran into problems with was Skype. The app lets you plug in your Skype credentials and hook up your phone to your account–a move that enables the use of SkypeOut minutes to make calls to landlines. Some of my Skype contacts would show up, but not all of them, even when they appeared online in the desktop application. I also was unable to place an outgoing call to a landline using SkypeOut, despite being able to call up someone on my Skype buddy list using the free Skype-to-Skype connection.

What makes Fring particularly unique is that will run in the background, so you can hit the home button and do something else while the IM and telephony continues to send and receive data. It’s something that won’t be possible from the apps found in Apple’s directory later this year since Apple is not letting third-party applications run as a background process–a stipulation of the iPhone Human Interface Guidelines that were released with the first version of the SDK.

Whether or not this application will be included in Apple’s hand-picked directory later this year is doubtful. Giving paying AT&T customers an easy way to save some money that comes out of the pocket of the telecom giant is probably not in Apple’s best interest, which is why I think the company released this as a direct download instead of trying to go official channels.

[via TechCrunch]

Source: www.download.com

Google Earth gets snail’s-eye view

The new Google Earth incorporates the Street View feature of Google Maps.

The new Google Earth incorporates the Street View feature of Google Maps, including a full-screen option.

(Credit: Google)

Part of the fun of Google Earth is flying over the virtual planet like Superman. But let’s face it: we’re ground-dwelling creatures, and the street-level view is useful, too. Even Superman has to land sometimes.

Enter Google Earth 4.3, due for release at about 8 p.m. Tuesday. It the Street View feature from Google Maps for a ground-level view of some areas, and a new navigation method makes the software more like a first-person video game, Google said in a statement.

The new version also lets users watch time-lapse views of sunsets and sunrises, either locally or when viewing the entire earth. It’s also got faster, more realistic 3D graphics, Google said.

Google racing for 3D map supremacy against Microsoft, which has been pouring energy into its Virtual Earth and Live Maps technology, including a major upgrade last week. That technology also features 3D views of the planet and various cities, including updated version-2 graphics of four cities.

Source: www.download.com

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