And there was me thinking this was an Evolution list ....
> I'm saddened by the responses in this thread. It seems Skype users > aren't all that interested in freedom of communication. If people > really _want_ to walk into the honey trap with their eyes wide open, I > guess there's little one can do to help them. It's called freedom of choice ... > When people aren't even > willing to explore the different services and applications, even when > it's given to them for free and as free software, then what can you > do? I don't use Skype much - and I've never investigated desktop VoIP and Ekiga so I thought I had better have a look. Now I'm a technically competent person, but for the amount that I might or might not use VoIP, it looks too much bother to try and setup: Skype is easy, and if I think that, what do you think that Joe Blogs' grandmother thinks. It is fine for you, as a person who is obviously interested/fanatical about such things to casually talk about SIP or TSP or whatever - to me my "Telephony Service Provider" is either BT or O2, not some strange company I've never heard of, and certainly neither of them are going to be interested in me connecting to them by VoIP. Anyway, can we get back to Evolution ... IMHO, there are more important things to be doing with Evo than implementing random buttons to clog up the interface. If there is a need for skype or ekiga or whatever to get access to the addressbook phone numbers, then implement it from that end. The only way I see telephony integration being useful with Evo is if you can, say, right-click on a phone number in a received email message and pass it to some application to dial it. > These people << snip of long political rant >> P. _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
