Microsoft is killing off Skype after years of decline

DragonSlayer101

Posts: 600   +3
Staff
RIP Microsoft is planning to shut down the once-dominant video calling application, Skype. The app was highly popular among internet users in the early 2000s but has suffered persistent neglect from Microsoft in recent years as the company shifted its focus to Teams as its primary messaging and team collaboration platform.

According to a hidden string found in the latest preview of Skype for Windows, Microsoft will sunset the software later this year. To inform users about the impending shutdown, the app is showing a dialog box notifying them that Skype will no longer be available starting in May 2025. Instead, users will be encouraged to download and install the free version of Teams to stay connected with friends and family.

If the report is accurate, the decision will come as no surprise, as Microsoft has long neglected Skype while actively promoting Teams. The app's decline can be attributed in part to the rise of numerous OTT video calling platforms and in part to Microsoft's clear lack of interest in keeping Skype alive.

If the report turns out to be accurate, it will surprise no one as Microsoft has long neglected Skype while actively promoting Teams. The app's decline can be attributed in part to the rise of numerous mobile video calling and messaging platforms and in part to Microsoft's clear lack of interest in keeping Skype alive.

While Skype still has a dedicated user base, it is vastly outnumbered by the millions who have moved on to other platforms such as iMessage, WhatsApp, Discord, Zoom, Slack, or even Microsoft's own Teams app. Many businesses also transitioned to Teams as their primary communication tool, while Microsoft continued to give Skype the cold shoulder.

Skype debuted in August 2003 as a pioneering voice communication tool that used a P2P protocol, making it faster and more reliable than many alternatives at the time. In 2005, eBay acquired it for $2.6 billion but later sold a majority stake to an investment group led by Silver Lake in 2009.

Microsoft then acquired Skype in 2011 for a reported $8.5 billion. However, in 2017, Microsoft introduced Teams and gradually shifted its focus away from Skype. While Teams has grown into a widely used business communication platform, it is not particularly beloved by its users, however its inclusion in Office 365 subscriptions has helped drive its widespread adoption.

Skype's impending demise will undoubtedly be a tough pill to swallow for its remaining users, who have refused to give up on the aging platform. While the exact number of Skype users in 2025 is unknown, the app reportedly had 36 million daily active users in 2023. Microsoft will be hoping that most of them transition to Teams, though whether that happens remains to be seen.

Permalink to story:

 
I won't miss the demise of an app that seems to need updating every time I reboot my PC yet adds no new features or fixes when doing so, and yet still doesn't as well as any of the competition on any device it runs on. Seeya Skype, you were good before MS got their hands on you but you should have been taken out back and retired years ago.

 
Who cares, we have Discord now. It's way better than the competition even today. It just needs to target the business market too.
And every time a company reaches that point of dominance, it crumbles. AIM had all the same features, plus you could text a phone number from AIM. AIM isn't around anymore.

Discord won't last forever either, and we should enforce the antitrust laws we have that way Microsoft doesn't just buy and shutter Discord too
 
The writing was on the wall ever since Microsoft acquired it, and destroyed it by first moving chats and attachments online, with no control over ones data. Then redesigned it when it wasn't broken, which truly killed it, and most people just moved to something stable like WhatsApp.

Though WhatsApp is also becoming quite bloated now, such as with Channels.

As for discord, I thought only the gaming community used it?

At work around 2010-2013, it was Skype, then most eventually moved to Teams due to corporate control over history and chats and channels. But due to this, if slack is available, people prefer to use Slack as it's much faster and cleaner and intuitive interface.
 
Another important point, anytime a company receives negative feedback, as happened to Skype and then Teams with their defaced emojis, I don't know why companies never listen and just double-down and blame the end users saying: "no one likes change".

Yes, people hate change for the worse and redesigning for the worse.

Windows 7 to 11 is a clear example of the downfall of a once-upon-a-time great OS!
 
And every time a company reaches that point of dominance, it crumbles. AIM had all the same features, plus you could text a phone number from AIM. AIM isn't around anymore.

Discord won't last forever either, and we should enforce the antitrust laws we have that way Microsoft doesn't just buy and shutter Discord too
Discord doesn't owe its existence to us, nor do we need Discord specifically. I'd rather leave it to them. I doubt Discord would sell out to MS, but it's their company anyways.

AIM didn't have all the same features as Discord in any way whatsoever. No messaging app has built out community features like Discord has. Slack and Teams are the closest comparisons, but they lack significantly compared to Discord.
 
As for discord, I thought only the gaming community used it?
Discord is used for building communities (ie. with family, friends, for school, YouTube channels), projects (ie. open source software development, Wikipedia), common interests (ie. books, animes, comics, etc), or even for building businesses (ie. MidJourney, content creation for pay, etc).

The problem is Discord has shown no interest in building enterprise features so far. Slack and Teams continue to attract the largest customers.
 
Another important point, anytime a company receives negative feedback, as happened to Skype and then Teams with their defaced emojis, I don't know why companies never listen and just double-down and blame the end users saying: "no one likes change".

Yes, people hate change for the worse and redesigning for the worse.

Windows 7 to 11 is a clear example of the downfall of a once-upon-a-time great OS!
Windows 11 a downfall? Guess you never used 8 or 10. I will miss Skpe, have fond memories of it like of MSN messenger.
 
Nothing good comes out of microsoft. Linkedin,skype,github,and autopilot...all declined once microsoft took over. I wonder why
 
Back