Internet telephony company Viber
has officially launched its Viber Out calling service which allows its
200 million-plus registered users to make low-cost calls to mobile and
landline phones worldwide from within its mobile apps.
The service — which was first opened in the Philippines last
month in the aftermath of a devastating typhoon — is available for all
users of Android and iOS smartphones and the desktop app. Viber says it
will roll out to Windows Phone customers soon.
Much like Skype’s own calling service, Viber customers can purchase
credit via in-app purchases from the iOS or Android apps, or by using a
credit card on the desktop client. The company touts its prices as being
“significantly” lower than the competition — rates vary from
country-to-country and whether you call a mobile or landline.
There are plenty of VoIP calling services out there — Hong Kong-based Maaii being another
— but, aside from messaging app features, Viber has a couple of other
nice touches. It attaches itself to your phone number so the person you
are calling will see your number flash up before they receive your call,
it also hooks into your device’s address book to make searching for
numbers a cinch.
“Viber Out gives our millions of users a new way to use Viber and
ensures that they can reach any contact at any time,” said Talmon Marco,
CEO of Viber. “We will continue to improve Viber Out, keeping our users
connected at the most affordable rates possible.”
The feature is the second monetization stream that Viber has launched in recent months. Back in October it introduced paid-for stickers, but low-cost international calls may prove to be a bigger money spinner.
As a company founded before smartphone adoption became mainstream,
Skype is still to translate the success of its desktop service to mobile
and the launch of Viber Out will put additional pressure on the
Microsoft-owned service, although Viber lacks the vast distribution that
Skype enjoys.
In addition, the new feature also gives Viber clearer differentiation
from WhatsApp, Line, WeChat and other messaging apps that compete with
it for attention on mobile.
Via: thenextweb
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