Skype has released an updated version of its free iPhone app on 6 April and said that it is iPad compatible, although it still does not include support for 3G-enabled Skype calls.
Termed Version 1.3.1, the Skype app includes boosted stability when switching between tabs, as well as handling unread chats and incoming calls.
While the Wi-Fi-only version of the iPad went on sale 3 April, a version of the device with both Wi-Fi and 3G will be released later in the month.
“We don’t yet know how our app will behave on the iPad,” Peter Parkes, a spokesperson for Skype, wrote in an 3 April posting on the company’s official blog. “Some journalists who had early access have reported that the existing Skype for iPhone app works just fine on the iPad hardware. This is great news, but certainly doesn’t give us enough confidence to be able to announce and release an app today as we want to give you the best Skype experience possible.”
Now that the iPad has been released into the wild, Parkes added, Skype intends to “start tuning and testing” the application for optimal compatibility. The Skype app allows free Skype-to-Skype calls on the iPhone, iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS and the iPod Touch (with a compatible headset and microphone) via Wi-Fi, in addition to sending SMS messages.
Skype claimed in February that an iPhone app with 3G-capable calling was in the works and would be released “soon.” At the time, the company claimed in a blog posting that the hold up was due to quality control: “When our 3G-capable Skype for iPhone app is released, it’ll let you make calls in wideband audio, giving you greater clarity and fidelity – because that’s what you expect from Skype.” Currently, however, the iPhone app is only capable of utilising 3G for Skype presence and chat; an attempted Skype call using 3G returns an error message mentioning “contractual restrictions.”
The iPad presents a potentially substantial market for third-party developers, especially considering that new owners of the device downloaded more than 1 million apps – along with 250,000 ebooks – by midnight on 3 April, the iPad’s first day of general release. In a company statement that day, Apple CEO Steve Jobs suggested that the average iPad owner downloaded three apps and “close to one book” within their first few hours of purchase.
Some 74 percent of initial iPad purchasers already own a Mac, according to Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster, while 66 percent own iPhones. Munster determined that number based on his own survey of 448 iPad buyers soon after 3 April. Although other analysts suggested in the weeks previous to the iPad’s release that the device could cannibalise market share for the iPod Touch and iPhone, Munster’s study found that only 2 percent of eventual iPad purchasers considered buying either of those devices before settling on the tablet.
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