A report from Pew Internet has revealed the true impact of Voice over IP (VoIP) and explains why Microsoft was tempted to spend $8.5 billion (£5.1bn) acquiring Skype.
Nearly one-quarter (24 percent) of US adult web users, or 19 percent of all American adults, have made calls online using Skype, Vonage or some other VoIP service, the research organisation said 30 May.
And some 5 percent of web users are making calls online on any given day.
Pew cobbled its findings from calling and polling 2,277 adults aged 18 and over from 26 April to 22 May, 2011.
Pew Director Lee Rainie said the new stats show marked increases in VoIP use from surveys the research organisation conducted in the past, particularly among affluent, urban and younger users.
“At various points during the 2000s, we asked similar questions and found that at most about a tenth of Internet users had ever used the Internet to place calls and the daily figure never rose above 1 percent of Internet users,” Rainie wrote in the report.
Pew attributed the general pickup in VoIP consumption to a few trends; calls from Skype and other services are free domestically, and low-cost internationally; VoIP is available on PCs, smartphones and tablet computers; and more meetings and classroom activities use VoIP calling with video.
So there are clearly consumer and business-user scenarios for VoIP.
What’s interesting about this survey is that Rainie and his researchers specifically referred to Skype, for which Microsoft plunked down a 10x premium, based on Skype’s 2010 sales of $860 million (£521m).
Skype, which has over 600 million registered accounts, compared with 160 million active users, has become a business division within Microsoft, led by Skype CEO Tony Bates. Bates will be tasked with ensuring Skype is blended with Microsoft Lync, Office 365 and Xbox Live, among other products.
Many analysts also believe Microsoft will use the Skype platform to generate traffic across Windows-based PCs, Windows Phone handsets and home entertainment systems.
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