Microsoft has officially announced Windows 11, its new operating system which will replace the current version over the next few years.

Among all the new features are two seemingly small but related things that jumped out.

First – Microsoft Teams, the video-calling app which saw a boom during 2020’s pandemic, will be integrated into Windows 11 by default.
And second – Skype will not be, for the first time in years.

That seems to suggest that Teams is the new favourite child, and many pundits think this is the beginning of the end for what was once the king of calling apps.
“Looks like Microsoft is killing off Skype,” wrote the Irish & Sunday Independent tech editor Adrian Weckler. “Bye bye Skype,” added Future Publishing’s content director Jeremy Kaplan. “RIP Skype,” was the immediate reaction from The Verge’s Tom Warren.

Microsoft bought Skype 10 years ago for $8.5bn (£6.1bn). At the time, it was the tech giant’s biggest-ever acquisition, and there were questions over whether it was over-paying.

But Microsoft was buying into an app that had been downloaded one billion times and had hundreds of millions of users.
“Together we will create the future of real-time communications,” Microsoft chief Steve Balmer projected.
It seemed to work – the app came bundled with every new computer, and user numbers were strong.
But by the middle of the decade, internet forums were full of posts asking “why is Skype so bad?” and complaining about updates. Many pointed to poor performance and questionable design choices.

At the same time, mobile messaging apps – such as WhatsApp or Facebook Messenger – were exploding in popularity and started to introduce video calls, one of Skype’s main attractions.

The first version of Skype was launched in 2003, and despite frequent updates, it was starting to show its age.

Meanwhile, Microsoft was cooking up its business chat app, Teams, based on more modern tech, which launched in 2017.
“Microsoft has been moving beyond Skype for several years now, with Teams being its strategic voice and video technology for the new era,” explained Angela Ashenden, an analyst at CCS Insight.

Teams is likely to evolve to make things simpler for personal users -particularly on mobile devices, she added.
But Skype is not being killed off entirely – it will continue to be offered as a download in the Microsoft Store for those who want it in Windows 11.

It won’t be alone.

Alongside the announcement of Skype’s relegation to the store, Microsoft also announced that some other much-maligned apps were being downplayed or removed.

Its ill-fated Cortana virtual assistant will no longer be pinned to the taskbar; Internet Explorer is disabled by default in favour of the more modern Edge browser; and tools such as OneNote, Paint 3D, and Windows’ 3D viewer app are getting the Skype treatment and becoming optional store downloads.

Source-BBC