Skype is certainly on a roll this week. Just yesterday it converted the latest beta of its Windows Mobile phone software into a full-fledged release. On Tuesday, the VoIP company did it again for Skype 4.1 for Windows. In addition, Apple greenlighted Skype 1.1 for the iPhone and iPod Touch, which you can download now.
Skype 4.1 for Windows
Skype 4.1 beta brought back features like accessibility, birthday reminders, and the capability to send a contact record to another contact. These had been left out when Skype first updated its interface to the 4.0 style, citing a wish to get core features out the door before piling on the extras. It’s these extras that users nevertheless clamored for. This minor point update also contains a major new feature that was first introduced in Skype 4.1 beta, screen sharing.
Screen sharing initiates a video call, using the technology to broadcast a recording of your screen–either a portion or the full screen–to one other viewer. Screen sharing has some limitations: you can’t simultaneously see a video of your buddy and their desktop, and since only one viewer at a time can peep your screen, you can’t use it as a free replacement for collaborative Web conferencing
Make no mistake, though: it’s a great feature that we’re happy to see added, but we’ll be even happier to watch it improve.
In addition to screen sharing, Skype 4.1 lets you feed a contact searches from outside address books, including those in Gmail, AOL, MSN, Yahoo, Microsoft Outlook, and a host of other players. If you’ve got it installed, the Web toolbar will highlight phone numbers within contact lists so you can call them through Skype.
Skype for iPhone
Skype 1.1 for iPhone and iPod Touch reintroduces the capability to listen to Skype voice mail and to send and receive SMS messages. These features had been available on the desktop version, but were not activated when Skype first came out for iPhone.
There are a few visual tweaks, also, which gloss up the look and feel of a few screens, most notably the dial pad. To top off the changes, this iPhone update pours on multilingual support, making it available in Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, and Traditional Chinese.
It still has far to go if it’s to get all the of the extra features that round out the Skype experience–games and conference calling are but two. We’re looking forward to what Skype will do with video calls now that the iPhone 3GS has its shiny new video recorder.
source: cnet

Sure, a £3,500 Motorola phone. Sounds good to me
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