Facebook: Group & mobile video chat, telephone calling likely

The three men from Facebook and Skype most responsible for the new video chat features answer questions about the launch.

By Mark Sullivan, PC World |  Unified Communications, Facebook, Skype Add a new comment

Facebook announced a new Skype-powered video chat service and a group text chat feature today, in a clear response to similar features included in the Google+ social networking service launched last week. The video chat feature received most of the attention here today.

I got a quick up-close demo from Skype's product manager for the Facebook video chat client, Mike Barnes, who cleared up a few early questions for me. I also chatted with Skype business manager Scott Miller and Facebook video chat lead engineer Phillip Su.

PCW: Does the new video chat service work on Macs?

Yes, it works on all browsers except Opera.

PCW: How can I access the video calling service in Facebook?

Barnes: Barnes: You can call people using a video call button on you friend's page. Or you can initiate a video call from within the Facebook Chat client.

PCW: Can I do an audio-only chat?

Barnes: Yes, but you have to disable your camera in the hardware setting in your computer. Skype has traditionally done voice calling first and then video. But Facebook wanted the reverse. They wanted to focus on video and have that come on automatically with the voice.

PCW: What if someone tries to video chat with me but I don't feel like chatting?

Barnes: The first time a friend calls you, a window pops up asking you if you want to start the video call. But at all times after that the chat begins automatically. So if you don't want to video chat you can become invisible by tweaking your setting within the chat client in the same way you become invisible for text chat. PCW: As far I can tell, you can't say you're available to chat with one person and not another.

[Read: Facebook Video Chat: First Tests Show Buggy Results]

PCW: So can I start using the new feature today?

Barnes: The video chat feature will roll out to all 750 million Facebook users in the next 7-10 days, reaching 10% of the user base by this Friday.

PCW: How does the install process work exactly?

Barnes: You go to facebook.com/videocalling and download a small add-on program. If you don't have the add-on installed yet and someone video calls you, a window pops up asking you if you want to install the add-on program. After you click yes, the call is automatically set up with your friend. [Note: If the service has not yet rolled out to you, and someone who has video chat installed calls you, you are then allowed to download the add-on and start using video chat, Facebook video chat lead engineer Phillip Su explains]. Facebook does this because it wants the service to work no matter who the user tries to call. Also, after someone gets a video call and then is allowed to download the add-on they're naturally going to want to keep using the service themselves, so it makes sense that they would be enable the service, Su says.

PCW: Why can't I do group video calls from the Facebook service?

Barnes: Obviously with the Google+ announcement last week we are thinking about matching that offering. We have already built the group video chat functionality as a premium service on the Skype desktop client. And because Skype is a modular system, it would not be difficult to add the funtionality. Because the technology has already been built it would not take much work at all to add it to the Facebook product.

(Barnes adds that another module that is ready to add to Facebook video chat is the ability to do video chats with mobile devices. Barnes gave me the distinct impression that Facebook will soon be adding both group video chat and mobile video chat in the near future. Even though those features are not ready to launch now, Facebook needed to announce the core part of the service NOW, as a way of answering the Google+ announcement of last week and to take the media spotlight off of Google social networking.)

I asked Facebook's Su if group and mobile chat are coming to Facebook soon. He said the same thing the Skype people said--that it would be relatively easy to do from a technological point of view. Su says, however, that Facebook has not been working on those features yet. Su says he and his team have not been designing their product to match the features in the Google+ Hangout video chat service, but rather to make the one-to-one chat service extremely easy to use for the non-tech-savvy.

PCW: Will I be able to make calls to cell phones and home phones from Facebook using Skype?


Originally published on PC World |  Click here to read the original story.

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