The geek dream of circumventing the
AT&T
contract and running
Skype's VoIP
telephony service on
Apple's new
iPhone has come a
step closer.
A complex partial workaround has been published in a blog by
Tom
Keating, founder and chief technical officer at
TMC Labs.
The workaround requires a broadband-connected PC which is remotely controlled
by the iPhone, software downloads and a degree of technical competence, all of
which tick the boxes of true 'geekdom' in that the esoteric nature of the fix
makes it unlikely to have mass appeal.
To use Skype services on the iPhone, the
Opera browser (v8.6 or above)
has to be installed on the handset and an Ajax-enabled application,
SoonR
Talk, installed on the broadband-connected PC.
Using the browser interface, the iPhone acts as a remote control for the PC
from where Skype and the SoonR service are accessed.
"Once you are logged in and connected, you can view your buddies using the
Ajax client and then click on the buddy you want to talk to," said Keating.
"SoonR Talk will tell your PC to call your mobile phone using SkypeOut. Then
SoonR Talk will instruct Skype to call your buddy over the Skype IP network,
placing you in a conference."
As Keating points out, this is not end-to-end Skype because the PC has to use
the PSTN to call the iPhone which will consume two SkypeOut credits to set up
the conference call.
But this may still be cheaper than making calls direct from the iPhone using
the AT&T mobile contract.
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