In U.S., Google Voice is Now “Open For All”… Release the Hounds!

Google has shed the last shred of exclusivity around its Web-based call management and messaging management mash-up (aka Google Voice). From this day forward, anyone (in the U.S. at least) register and use the service (or simply use an already established Gmail username and password). Clearly, Google has learned enough from the early adopters and satisfied itself that the system can withstand any onslaught that might result from an influx of newbies.

The Google Voice landing page lists the primary features as “One Number” (for all your phones), “Online Voicemail” (that behaves like email) and “Cheap calls” (which are actually free in the U.S. and Canada). Yet I think that those features are listed in reverse order of importance to folks that are generally unacquainted with VoIP services, call management and the joys of automated transcription of voicemail messages.

Of the dozen of so people I’ve invited to use Google Voice, those of us who use it to make free calls to Canada are the happiest. Most of the others have either not used the service at all, or occasionally give out their “Google Voice” number to people with whom they are carrying out business. After a few months of using the service, most don’t know their Google Voice number by heart (I know I don’t). Recent invitees have been able to pick a vanity number (like ones that include their names) that they find easier memorize.

With cheap calling as the primary reason people register for Google Voice, it is on a collision course with Skype when it comes to growing the user base for enhanced VoIP services. Indeed, it is probably not a coincidence that Skype chose this day to open its waiting list for “Skypekit” a library of software and API’s to help application developers integrate Skype into their offerings for all sorts of devices and mobile platforms.

Stepped up activity surrounding Google Voice and Skype will lead other “cloud based” telephony platforms (like IfByPhone and Bandwidth.com, among others) to step up their game. Thus the second half of 2010 should emerge as a golden age for phone apps. With newbies entering the market both as customers and as application developers, the best counsel I can provide is to say (as I have in the past), “The difference between a brilliant phone app and a stupid phone trick is the attention paid to the quality of the user experience.”



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