'Millions' of Skype internet phone users cut off after technical glitch
Hampered: For two days, users of Skype have struggled to sign inInternet phone service Skype was today racing to fix a technical glitch that is thought to have left millions of users unable to log in. The embarrassing setback comes just two weeks after Microsoft bought the firm for 5.2billion, prompting claims the outage was caused by efforts to integrate systems. It first affected users yesterday afternoon and this morning subscribers were still complaining that they couldnt sign in.Yesterday Skype claimed the problems affected only a small number of its more than 660million users.But the fact that its website was also briefly taken offline suggests that the number of subscribers failing to sign has in run into millions.Messages about the disruption have appeared from several countries on Twitter.This morning an American user, ocrapitsj, tweeted: What's Happening? SKYPE IS NOT WORKING!Jamie Barton, from North East England, added: It just quits on open. What a load of junk.'And New Yorker MidnightHerald posted the comment: Had an interview scheduled via Skype this morning. What do I wake up to? A veritable skypocalypse.Problems were first reported yesterday afternoon.On its own Twitter account, at 1.30pm, Skype officials wrote: Some of you may have problems signing in to Skype and making calls.Eventually, almost 12 hours later, Skype posted a solution for Windows users by going to the website: http://bit.ly/jwUhAx.Thefirm, based in Luxemborg, also issued a temporary manual fix for the problem that involved deleting a file call shared.xml from the its programme folder.
Embarrassment: Skype found Niklas Zennstrom at the eG8 forum in Paris. The glitch comes just two weeks after he sold his firm to Microsoft for 5.2billionIt fo! llows an other major breakdown in December that affected 15million users and left callers were cut off in mid-conversation. At that time Skype promised an overhaul of its servers to avoid further outages. Whateverthe cause of this latest failure, it will embarrass Microsoft, which bought Skype on May 10 in its largest ever acquisition.
Analysts questioned whether its technology and relatively small revenues justified the multibillion-pound price tag.But Skype founder Niklas Zennstrom said the software giant could help expand the phone service and improve video call quality.Skype'sfull potential hasn't been realized yet, said Zennstrom in an interview at the e-G8 forum in Paris yesterday, saying improvements in networks and devices such as smartphones meant the experience of using the service was still getting better.I think that Microsoft has ahuge opportunity to integrate it into a lot of their different services, said the Swedish entrepreneur and venture capitalist.
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