My best friends and I grew up doing everything
together. At any given point in time we
could be found at one of our houses, playing the newest board game we were
inventing. Or perhaps we would be at an
empty park, fighting Airsoft wars with plastic pellet-firing guns. Other times, we could be hidden at a nearby
forest, building a secret hideout.
Unfortunately, all of our activities ceased when we all moved to
different states. Now, it is difficult
to talk to, much less spend time with, each other. However, there is a technology that lets us
talk to one another and even see whoever we are talking to: Skype. Because Skype has enabled us to maintain our
friendships even though we live in different states, Skype is a very beneficial
technology.
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Skype
also has a few other features that are fairly useful; the biggest ones are the
abilities to share files and to share screens.
While you are in a chat with someone, you have the option of sending a
file to them. I have mainly used this
feature to quickly send pictures to my friends, but it can also be used for
sharing Word documents or any other small files. The other nifty feature, screen sharing,
gives you an easy way to show someone else what is on your screen, providing a
great way to demonstrate how to do something or to just show what your desktop
looks like.
Now
that you understand what Skype is, I can explain just how useful it is to
me. As I explained in the beginning of
this post, I was extremely close to my friends.
Before we moved away, I would sometimes talk to them on Skype when one
of us was on a trip. However, since I
knew I would see them after the trip was over, it was not very urgent. On the other hand, now that I know that, if I
do ever meet up with them, it will not be anytime soon, using Skype to talk to
them seems necessary. I really look forward
to the “Daniel Reimer is online” pop-up, because I know that I’ll be able to
talk to one of my best friends again, to hear his voice and laugh with him. Once more we’ll be able to tell each other
how we’ve been and how hard the classes are, and just talk about what we used
to talk about. Or, when one of them logs
on while I am in the library and need to be quiet, we can use the instant
messaging to just type to each other.
Either way, I get to communicate with my friends and maintain our
friendship.
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There
have been some bad side effects of having Skype, though. When I’m trying to do homework, is suddenly
becomes much more tempting to check Skype every minute to find someone to talk
to, and the pop-up informing me that one of my friends logged on is usually a
big enough distraction to start us on a 30 minute chat that, although
entertaining, does not help with the schoolwork that is due an hour later. To avoid this happening more, I’m going to
have to learn to log off Skype whenever I have important work to do.
Oh, wait, it looks like Kevin is
online now. I have to go!
I too used Skype, although not to communicate with my friends, but mainly with my family. I would Skype my parents probably about once a week my first year away at school. I like the idea that Skype is free, and things such as Skype, and Vonage, really make me question the need to have expensive home phone lines, with all of their hidden fees. I wonder, though, if these things, like Skype, will eventually cost money in the future because we live in a very consumer oriented society, and nationally we’re concerned with making a profit.
ReplyDeleteMy family has actually moved away from traditional phone lines. Instead, we're using a internet phone service, Ooma, that uses normal handsets and works great most of the time.
DeleteI don't think that Skype is ever going to cost money to use. Between advertising, the cost to call land lines, and the Premium subscription that enables more features, I have a feeling that they're making enough money already. In fact, I think that charging for basic Skype would be harmful, because it would drastically reduce the user base, decreasing the amount advertisers pay.