Site icon Converge Digest

Microsoft Outline VoIP Strategy, Voice/Video Traffic Soars on MSN

At the Spring VON conference in San Jose, Microsoft outlined its VoIP strategy and vision for Windows Live.

“Our mission with Windows Live is to deepen people’s relationships with whomever and whatever matters most to them,” said Blake Irving, corporate vice president of the MSN Communication Services and Member Platform group. “We will get there by working closely with the whole ecosystem of telecommunications, Internet services and hardware manufacturing partners to build a complete presence- and contact-centric communications experience. Voice and video will play a critical role as a data type that brings relationships to life online, taking us from an era of black and white to Technicolor.”

Microsoft today offers customers free video conversation (integrated audio and video) powered by Logitech and free PC-to-PC voice capabilities powered by Microsoft technology via MSNMessenger. In addition, Windows Live Messenger includes one-way PC-to-phone calling capabilities in several markets that are part of a pay-for-use service provided by Verizon.

Microsoft also reported a sharp uptick in customer use of voice and video services over the past six months, including record usage in January.

MSN Messenger hosted voice sessions totaling more than 800 million minutes in January 2006.

Video usage on the service is currently growing even faster than voice usage alone, with video conversation connecting customers for almost 1.1 billion minutes in January. In addition, stand-alone webcam usage totaled an additional 7 billion minutes in January.

“More than 20 million users on average are using our voice conversation service in MSN and Windows Live Messenger each month,” Irving said. “While the number is impressive, it’s only a small portion of our 205 million active MSN Messenger users each month. There is still a lot of room to grow.”

Microsoft continues to invest in voice and video, with the following scheduled to be available to customers later this year:

http://www.microsoft.com

Exit mobile version