

Supported languages: Arabic, Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, English, German, Greek, Spanish, Estonian, Finnish, French, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Dutch, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian, Chinese Simplified and Chinese Traditional. To give the web app a try, visit or and log in with your Skype or Microsoft account. The ability to use Skype on the web without a plug-in will be great for frequent travelers, people using Skype in Internet cafés and just about anyone who is reluctant to install Skype’s full-on client on their desktop. “With WebRTC, there won’t be any downloads or installs-you can just get straight to your conversation”, said the team. Thankfully, future iterations will let you chat over Skype directly from a browser without any downloads or installs: thanks to a web technology called WebRTC, you’ll simply give the web app permission to access your web camera and microphone. Pictured below: notifications in the web app.īringing Skype’s voice, video and instant messaging features to the web requires you to install a small plug-in before you make or receive your first call.


Seen top of post: your timeline in Skype for Web. Instead of two separate lists for contacts and recent conversations, Skype for Web features a handy timeline view which brings together both your contacts and recent chats in a single, searchable list. Skype for Web, currently in beta, lets you see all your contacts, access the latest conversation history, chat, as well as make free voice or video calls with one or more contacts.įor incoming calls and instant messages, a notification will pop up in your browser even if you’re using another app or viewing a different website in another browser window. In addition, the web app now runs on Linux and Chrome OS, though fans of Google’s operating system powering Chromebooks can only take advantage of instant messaging at this time. Skype for Web runs in any web browser that supports modern web technologies, including Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, Google’s Chrome, Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox on Windows and OS X. Microsoft-owned Skype has now made its web-based client available regardless of where you live, following its limited rollout last November.
