Should Apple Let Competitors Use FaceTime? (cnet.com) 211
In 2010, Steve Jobs first introduced FaceTime and promised it would become an open industry standard that could be used by Apple's competitors -- not just Apple. Well, eight years later and that still hasn't happened. CNET's Sean Hollister provides a theory as to why that is: There's also an ongoing lawsuit to consider -- as Ars Technica documented in 2013, Apple was forced to majorly change how FaceTime works to avoid infringing on the patents of a company called VirnetX. Instead of letting phones communicate directly with each other, Apple added "relay servers" to help the phones connect. Presumably, someone would have to pay for those servers, and/or figure out a way for them to talk to Google or Microsoft or other third-party servers if FaceTime were going to be truly open. But that doesn't make a broken promise less frustrating. Particularly now that Apple could potentially fix annoying business video calls as well. A Skype-killing video chat service that worked on Mac, iOS *and* Windows, Android and the open web? That's something I bet companies would be happy to pay for, too.
An answer to the question (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Usually when a slashdot story ends in a question it's an easy "No".
But this time it's different.
The answer is YES (and I'm a video conferencing engineer)
If you are indeed a "Videoconferencing Engineer" (whatever THAT means!), you would already understand why Apple can't, in a practical sense, let everyone use FaceTime's infrastructure (forced upon them as a workaround for Virnext's/SAIC's BOGUS Patents) for free.
And if Apple make FaceTime a subscription service, the all the Slashtards would do nothing but excoriate them for attempting to "Profiteer", even though it would simply be cost-offsetting due to the interposing server requirement necessitated by the
Re: (Score:2)
They could certainly set up a federated system so that Apple users use their servers and Android servers use Google's servers.
Re: (Score:2)
Err... Android users.
Re: (Score:2)
Err... Android users.
They would still have to invest in an Android and Windows Client, at the very least, and the traffic would have to traverse their network and servers, even from the Android and Windows Clients.
And we aren't talking about SMS/MMS messages. This is streaming audio/video at at least 100 kbps. Not insignificant when multiplied by a zillion Android/Windows users.
No thank you.
Re: (Score:2)
Only if they were going between an iOS user and an Android or Windows user. Android-to-Android would hit Google's server exclusively. And if it is going between an iOS user and a non-iOS user, Apple's systems *should* be involved.
Re: (Score:3)
Exactly. If you have friends who are not using a Mac, iPad or iPhone, are they really your friends? /sarcasm
Re: (Score:2)
Well, they are friends - second class - but still are friends. You are so silly ...
Re: (Score:2)
Okay, how about writing the question properly: Should Apple continue to use a proprietary protocol which excludes most of the planet from communicating with their zealot-like customers who have drunk too much kool-aid to consider open alternatives?
You think THAT is "Writing the question PROPERLY???"
Maybe for a Slashtard Hater Anonymous COWARD.
Re: (Score:2)
Since when is the protocol proprietary? It is Jabbar, you moron!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
And you would benefit from getting the joke...
Me and everybody else it would seem. If that was funny it would have been modded +5 funny by now.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
why anger management course? Surely they are less terrible than gulags but not all people that you want to send to anger management should go there. In fact sometimes anger is justified. I do not see much anger in the GP post anyway.
I think it is Apple's ballgame, and they can let anyone in, or not, as they see fit.
Personally, I think it is simply jealousy on the part of the "other guys"; because Apple has the only truly WORKING system (and yes, I have tried to use others. They ALL range from "Well, I guess it works MOST of the time" to "Are you Fucking KIDDING?!?"
With FaceTime, you Call, you Chat. There is no Step 2.
Re: (Score:2)
Skype 15 years ago worked superbly.
No idea why several vendor/owner changes and rewrites fucked it up so badly.
However I still use Skype for video calls.
Re: (Score:2)
Skype 15 years ago worked superbly.
No idea why several vendor/owner changes and rewrites fucked it up so badly.
However I still use Skype for video calls.
Thanks for telling us. We will note that in your file.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe us Apple zealots don't want to talk to judgmental people like you anyway.
The green chat bubbles, they taints us, my precious.
LOL!
CNET's Theory (Score:2, Troll)
His theory seems to be:
1) It is expensive to run the servers needed to work around a patent, currently under dispute and may be invalid, so adding devices requires someone paying for the servers. So once the patents are ruled invalid the barrier to Apple making FaceTime available to other devices goes away?
2) They like lock in. I bet #2 wins.
A polite no thank you (Score:2)
I do not want any Apple software on any of my devices.
Re:A polite no thank you (Score:5, Insightful)
And I do not want any Facebook or Microsoft software on any of my devices.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't want any software on my devices not written by me! I'm working right now with my soldering iron to fix the firmware so that the machine boots cleanly into nothing. Then I will build a switchboard to hack together and rudimentary "monitor" like OS to boot into. Then I will start writing my assembler ... just not sure from where and how to feed it its source code ... USB is still to far away, a file system out of scope ... I guess as a one man project, spending about4h a day, it will take roughly 48 y
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Apple is the largest contributor to Clang,LLVM, and Webkit. Chances are you've got at least one app that exists because of those tools
And don't forget CUPS; which Apple OWNS outright...
Who cares about facetime? (Score:2)
Port iMessage over to android already. The best part is messages don't even need cell access as they can be sent over wifi. Then make Windows builds for the desktop too.
Re: (Score:2)
There's dozens of existing messaging apps, most of which are better than Apple's. Android can use any of them. There's no reason to pollute Android with iOS crap.
Re: (Score:2)
Those third party apps are great and all but nobody with an iPhone will be using it.
Re: (Score:2)
On my iPhone I have: Skype, Threema, Telegram, WhatsApp, Viber and Line. So have most of my friends.
How exactly do you chat with an Android friend who has no iMessenger but only Viber or WhatsApp, without installing Viber or WhatsApp?
Actually it is the opposite way around, most iPhone friends have switched off iMessenger as it does not work reliable cross devices.
Re: (Score:2)
There's dozens of existing messaging apps, most of which are better than Apple's. Android can use any of them. There's no reason to pollute Android with iOS crap.
Other than the fact that it is vastly superior, or you all wouldn't be pining for the fjords, which is what this ENTIRE article is about!
Re: (Score:3)
In general, all the video chat apps (Skype, WebEx, Hangouts) are crap once you get beyond 1-to-1. Half the meetings I've ever been to that involve video chat started at ten past the scheduled start because of connectivity issues. And the root cause is often some obscure setting someone flipped to get someone else's video chat product to work at the last meeting. (And no, "let's just use one company standard" never works because of vendors, partners, etc.)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Most people that use apple products - I'm not one of them - love it for many reasons. I seriously doubt people would leave the Apple world simply because there was an android facetime app.
Re: (Score:2)
I seriously doubt people would leave the Apple world simply because there was an android facetime app.
Ok. I was wrong.
https://apple.slashdot.org/com... [slashdot.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It is the opposite around.
As soon as they realize how cool an Apple Software is, they might switch devices.
Why VIDEO chat? (Score:2)
Don't get me wrong, video is great, but I'm still waiting for a system that does voice really well and can call out to "real" phone numbers. Skype can do it. Google does it for free. Why not FaceTime?
For that matter, if both ends are on iPhones, and we're both on Wifi, why can't it route my phone call over FT back end invisibly, just like it does in Messages now?
Only two features... (Score:5, Interesting)
Facetime and iMessage are the only two features keeping me on the apple ecosystem.
Mom and Dad can easily call their kids and with the touch of a button switch to facetime and see the grandkids.
With android, I'm not sure if you're supposed to send messages with Messages, Allo, Hangouts....
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I know no one who as "find my friends" switched on.
Who is using such a privacy breach? And what actually makes it so interesting for you? Tracking your kids? Your wife, do really all your friends know where you are?
Re: (Score:3)
Kids and wife.
Got to know what the former is up to, can't let the latter sneak up on me.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah I was surprised the summary indicating companies would care about video messaging, the primary use case is definitely grandparents/grandkids.
And HOW many of those are there?
Sounds like a pretty large market-segment to me...
Re: (Score:2)
Some companies might want it just to help micromanage.
How many call in meetings do you dial in and then go do other stuff? I'm in one now.
Re: (Score:2)
There have been articles --too many to even search so I won't bother -- about the video being unnecessary for company, or b2b, calls, when the agenda is what matters more, and not the visual distraction.
You must not do software development/support, or you wouldn't say that.
Re: (Score:2)
Same. The Android's fragmented market hasn't provided a solution that is integrated, dead simple, high quality, and uses little battery. I think Google really messed up here. They should have provided the underlying messaging infrastructure for video, text, and calling that vendors and developers could build upon.
Not only my parents, but I come across a lot of foreign GPs and parents who either never touched technology or used low end Androids. Those folks can have an iDevice explained to them over the p
Re: (Score:2)
Android comes with Google's messaging apps, which supports video chat. It works fine.
It's all there, it's just that people prefer WhatsApp or whatever is hot this year. Google's failing is not lack of infrastructure or product, it's a failure to market it. But then again maybe Google are not that bothered, because there isn't really any money to be made from encrypted chat and video conferencing.
Re: (Score:2)
The failure of google is: the apps don't work, or to be fair: work barely.
And more important to me: they are so ugly it hurts my eyes to use them. (Looking at you: Hangouts)
Re: (Score:2)
Hangouts works fine for me. What issue do you have?
It's not pretty but the speaker icon system is very functional.
Re: (Score:2)
With android, I'm not sure if you're supposed to send messages with Messages, Allo, Hangouts....
With Android why would you pin yourself down to a single ecosystem just like you did with the iOS? Messages, Allo, Hangouts? The answer is none of the above. Use a system that is cross platform.
Re: (Score:2)
Use a system that is cross platform.
I don't get it. Why do people who are so smart as you are write such bollox, nonsense, bullshit?
If you only speak english, I have to address you in english, I can not sent you a letter in german or mandarin.
If you only have WhatsApp, and I find you sexy, obviously I install WhatsApp instead of pestering you with begging you to install a cross platform app.
If someone gives you his phone number you call him, if he gives you his eMail, you sent him an email. You are not pes
Um...non-fanboys use Skype (Score:2)
* And by their I mean the thing that they bought, this was an acquisition.
I admit being able to dynamically switch from call to video call is cool (FaceTime) but what else does it do that you can't get on something that works for everyone?
Huh? (Score:3)
Why would anyone think that facetime would kill the market leader if they ever stepped it up and delivered almost what compteitors were already delivering. Skype already works on Windows, UWP, macOS, Linux, Android, iOS, WatchOS, Windows Phone, HoloLens, Xbox One... It does hd video, hd group video, audio, messaging... I mean I understand the need for competition but we've already got that in spades. Does Facetime actually bring anything useful to the table? I was under the impression that it was just a "me too" videoconference app that is limited to apple only so that Apple could continue to have their walled garden. Does it actually have some valuable and unique feature that I should be coveting?
Re: Huh? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
But then so do all the other competitors. Skype isn't the only example.
Re: (Score:2)
Does Facetime actually bring anything useful to the table?
Good question. If you live in a country where a messaging system not tied to an OS vendor is the norm (such as Brazil or the Netherlands with WhatsApp, or China with WeChat) you would honestly wonder what the fuss is all about. No one I know uses Facetime though plenty of people use video chatting.
Re: (Score:2)
Does Facetime actually bring anything useful to the table?
Yes, as a matter of fact it does.
It works.
Unlike the "System Formerly Known as Lync".
Re: (Score:2)
Does Facetime actually bring anything useful to the table?
Yes, as a matter of fact it does.
It works.
Unlike the "System Formerly Known as Lync".
I don't think skype and lync are really related. Lync was a copycat product made by Microsoft just as facetime is a copycat product made by Apple. Neither of them brought anything interesting to the table. If "it's better than LYNC" is all that Facetime has going for it... that doesn't bode well for the future of facetime on platforms where users have a choice.
Re: (Score:2)
Does Facetime actually bring anything useful to the table?
Yes, as a matter of fact it does.
It works.
Unlike the "System Formerly Known as Lync".
I don't think skype and lync are really related. Lync was a copycat product made by Microsoft just as facetime is a copycat product made by Apple. Neither of them brought anything interesting to the table. If "it's better than LYNC" is all that Facetime has going for it... that doesn't bode well for the future of facetime on platforms where users have a choice.
"Skype For Business" is what I meant by "The System Formerly Known as Lync". They are the same product, just rebranded by MS.
Re: (Score:2)
Does Facetime actually bring anything useful to the table? I was under the impression that it was just a "me too" videoconference app that is limited to apple only so that Apple could continue to have their walled garden. Does it actually have some valuable and unique feature that I should be coveting?
The first assumption that everyone makes is that Product A was meant to compete with Product B. In this case, I don't think FaceTime was ever meant to replace multi-user business video conferencing apps like Skype and WebEx. It was meant to be an alternate to consumer phone calls by adding video. But it worked over Wifi so consumers didn't have to use minutes. Android has many alternates to FaceTime including Google Hangouts which debuted after FaceTime; however, every 3rd party app might suffer from the sa
Missed the most important thing (Score:5, Interesting)
The story fails to mention that Steve Jobs' announcement was also the first time any of the programming team at Apple had heard it.
Since then, maybe they could have engineered a new solution that could be open, but Jobs basically made that point up on the spot and following through on that at the time really wasn't feasible. After the initial announcement window had passed, it'd be hard to believe that it would be worth their time.
Is Opening It Up An Option? (Score:2)
If only... (Score:2)
Presumably, someone would have to pay for those servers, and/or figure out a way for them to talk to Google or Microsoft or other third-party servers if FaceTime were going to be truly open
If only there was a standard cross (X) Messaging Platform Protocol which messaging servers could use to talk to each other.
Can't add phone nums to existing contacts in Skype (Score:2)
Signal (Score:2)
What about Signal?
I've only used it for text messages, but supposedly it works for voice and video as well.
FaceTime is way easier to use than Skype (Score:2)
So yes, letting everyone use FaceTime would bring a quick end to Skype. The exclusivity FaceTime has right now is why despite its simplicity, nobody uses it.
Brand name confusion in 3...2... (Score:2)
By restricting it to the Apple ecosystem, it has so far remained pretty clear that it is an Apple-only thing.
If they open it up, however, I expect there's going to be lots of confusion about who really controls the technology because of the popularity of Facebook.
Conceptually, yes, I think that it's a good thing. But given the potential for trademark dilution, I don't think it's in Apple's or Facebook's best interest to do this. I think that Apple should consider renaming it before opening it, or no
"provides a theory as to why that is" (Score:2)
I have a "theory" as to why that is, too: IT'S FUCKING APPLE. THEY DO VENDOR LOCK-IN.
Not that hard to figure out.
Re: Lesson learned (Score:4, Insightful)
Facetime is not an open standard.
XMPP/jabber is, but even google whose Talk was originally based on Jabber, is moving away from it with Hangouts.
Re: Lesson learned (Score:4, Informative)
Facetime is based on open standards:
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: Lesson learned (Score:4, Insightful)
Like so many dipshits on Slashdot, you have completely missed the point. It would have become open were it not for douchebag patent trolls.
This. This is THE reason. Yet TFS uses inflammatory language like "broken promises" to up the Click-Count, and yet calls "Virnext" the neutral-sounding term "Company", when they DESERVE the epithet "Patent Troll".
But that doesn't up the Click-Count now, does it?
Re: Lesson learned (Score:5, Insightful)
VirnetX is the US intelligence communityâ(TM)s patent troll. The CIA/NSA sued Apple to keep them from offering encrypted, direct-to-client video chat between multiple people (the old iChat, far superior to FaceTime, let multiple people video chat on one call without routing through intermediate servers). Likewise Skype once used a decentralized network for routing calls, without any known hubs through which calls would be destined to pass, before Microsoft bought them. IChat was neutered into FaceTime and Skype was neutered by Microsoft in the same way and for the same reason: both started requiring calls to be routed through centralized hubs so the Feds could collect them easier for eavesdropping. Thatâ(TM)s why VirnetX sued Apple.
Re: (Score:3)
Do you have any specific evidence that "VirnetX" has ties to the US intelligence community, or is this just speculation out of your ass?
No one heard of webRTC? (Score:3)
christ there's a zillion ways to video chat with high fidelity, low latency, and low bandwidth now. No one should care. This bus came and went. Why beat on apple over something utterly moot.
WebRTC IS zero install (Score:2)
What do you mean access to the userbase. Surely you don't me cold calling people with spam facetime. I think (hope) you simply mean no need to install any software. And well that'a the whole point of webRTC. try it sometime.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Skype is owned and operated by Microsoft. No thank you.
Re: (Score:2)
If businesses considered WhatsApp, there is a whole bunch of offerings from major brands that they can and currently do use. The nice thing about FaceTime is that it is dead simple and yet very very good video wise. Even Google with their massive infrastructure couldn't get the quality to the level the Apple did.
Re: (Score:2)
Its amazing what apple can do with others stolen tech.
What tech did they steal?
They changed their entire protocol and added infrastructure to avoid stealing tech.
Hate much?
Re: (Score:2)
No worries, WhatsApp has got you covered: everything Facetime plus group chat, on iOS, Android, and more.
iOS 12 will introduce Group FaceTime with up to 32 participants.
And it won't be hosted by Facesuck.
Re: (Score:2)
And it will let you talk to an entire 43% of the people you want to invite into the chat. Yay!
Re: (Score:2)
And it will let you talk to an entire 43% of the people you want to invite into the chat. Yay!
That's THEIR problem.
Re: (Score:2)
Every business outside the US I've dealt with is already using Skype. It works.
I agree. I'm not sure why the submission assumed a Skype-killing app is all that necessary, since Skype already works on all the devices mentioned. And it isn't even like Skype is the only option, as WhatsApp would also cover this use case.
A more apt question is why anyone uses Facetime when it is stuck within the Apple ecosystem. My wife's immediate family all use Apple devices and have mostly been weened off of Facetime, but in this case it was because my wife and I had the first set of grand kids and the
Re: (Score:3)
I'm not sure why the submission assumed a Skype-killing app is all that necessary
Right, let's not be too hasty, and think that a problem even exists. Replace one walled-garden ecosystem with another walled garden ecosystem? Thanks for playing, but no.
Re:Just use Hangouts or Skype (Score:4, Insightful)
It does work, but it isn't an open standard. Same problem with Facetime, or WebEx.
At my work, we have fancy Cisco teleconference systems. Which only work for WebEx. The vendor may be using Skype, so it will not work, an exec may call in on their iPhone (and doesn't have the WebEx or Skype app installed).
Businesses who are strict on security are not so keen on having apps install that use the camera.
Re: Just use Hangouts or Skype (Score:3)
it works, but it will never be near as useful as FaceTime was.
It was incredibly easy to use, didn't really need to make an account and finding people is just a matter of having their phone number to use. The popularity was sky rocketing.
Then Steve Jobs died and everything at Apple started becoming less compatible with everything. The fact that transferring photos or files from iPhone or IPad to PC is getting more and more annoying.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It is of little use to most Apple users, too, because it requires both parties to have an iPhone. Statistically, only a little less than half of an iOS user's calls can use Facetime, and on average, less than one fifth of all possible calls have that option (43% * 43%). By contrast, everybody can download Facebook, sign up for a free account, so 100% of all possible calls have that option (ignorin
Re: (Score:2)
Direct connections are hard to tap, even to see who is talking to who. Having relay servers, now that is useful to many entities.
Not when its end-to-end encrypted.
Re: No. Abandon proprietary video calls. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Use secure, free, open-source solutions where your data and calls are not being collected, and you are not being profiled.
If you think content from your FaceCalls is not stored, you are only kidding yourself.
Prove it, or STFU, Hater!
Re: (Score:2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_over_LTE [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Well let's start with the first thing in that originally FaceTime was wifi only. It added LTE later depending on which carrier allowed it. Second, my understanding that viLTE was hardly used because the carriers refuse to allow phones to interoperate. So even if Apple adopted it, two people couldn't use if were on different carriers regardless if they had the same iPhone or Android or Windows phone. The only way to get around it was to use 3rd party apps which enforce their own segregation as they may not i
Re: (Score:2)
Um, maybe even just a few words saying WTF Facetime is? I had to go look it up.
Facetime is Apple's proprietary VoIP protocol and application. And the reason you've never heard of it is because .. well, ok, that's what the article is about: since it's proprietary, nobody is allowed to use it, so it's another technological dead end, killed (or at least in suspended animation) for 20 years.
Why Apple had to invent their own thing instead of just picking some standard, nobody says. But it's not too hard to guess the usual reasons for this kind of crap.
Hmmm. Maybe, just maybe, that is one of the reasons that Apple's Videoconferencing system JUST WORKS, when no one else's does, to a lesser or greater extent.
And yes, at work I have had the misfortune to have to use several of the non-Apple videoconferencing systems. All suck when compared with FaceTime.
Re: (Score:2)
Why Apple had to invent their own thing instead of just picking some standard, nobody says. But it's not too hard to guess the usual reasons for this kind of crap.
Probably the same reason why some of the 3rd party video conferencing apps also do not employ a standard and operate among each other.
Re: (Score:3)
Only Apple has these problems, and with them it's insurmountable, even though so many other companies can do it today? Right.
Depends on whether you want a "pretty much always works" experience, or a "I GUESS it's ok" experience.
Guess which one Apple supplies, and which one EVERYONE else supplies?
Re: (Score:2)