By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
World of SoftwareWorld of SoftwareWorld of Software
  • News
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gaming
  • Videos
  • More
    • Gadget
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Search
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
Reading: Goodbye, Skype. I’ll never forget you
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
World of SoftwareWorld of Software
Font ResizerAa
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gadget
  • Gaming
  • Videos
Search
  • News
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gaming
  • Videos
  • More
    • Gadget
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
World of Software > News > Goodbye, Skype. I’ll never forget you
News

Goodbye, Skype. I’ll never forget you

News Room
Last updated: 2025/04/27 at 4:50 AM
News Room Published 27 April 2025
Share
SHARE

I doubt many people are mourning the demise of Skype. The sky-blue platform that revolutionized the video call, the medium for long-distance relationships in the early 2010s, had not been relevant for almost a decade when Microsoft announced its impending death. My own relationship with Skype’s clunky tangle of video, voice and chat peaked in 2011 – the same year Microsoft purchased it for a headline-making $8.5bn, only to let it wither in the shadow of professionalized, less-pixelated options. By 2014, it was basically obsolete, as video calls shifted to more integrated apps like FaceTime, and my college schedule did not allow for glitchy, hours-long catchups. Snapchat was far more efficient.

Like most people, I barely touched Skype from the mid-2010s on; the news that Microsoft will shutter it on 4 May and fold its data into the free version of Teams prompted me to log back in for the first time in five years. All that remained of my formerly thriving Skype life – once a log of video calls picked up and put down, peppered with chats pleading to “pleaseeeeeeee call me back bitchhhh (:” – were a handful of spam crypto chats and phishing links from former favorites who had long quit the platform, as well.

Still, I must pour one out for Skype, a place where I would spend whole nights in 2011 gabbing over murky video, a form and era of technology I associate with a spectral, critical, inarticulable valence of intimacy that also feels bygone. I lavished hours and hours and hours on the platform in high school, catching up with my older friends who slipped the bounds of our town for university, or sussing out kids from other states I met on college visits, or desperately trying to keep my older unofficial boyfriend’s attention despite all signs pointing to him moving on.

Skype was an island of intimacy – more than text but not quite the real thing – that tangled emotions and refracted IRL life in ways difficult to explain. It was the tether to people outside my small world – people older than me, cooler than me, going to more parties than me. A whole night on Skype video hearing a friend recap his escapades of pledging a fraternity, clinging to the fact that he still wanted to talk to me. A nebulous romantic relationship kept alive by the semblance of intimacy and the promise of access – we could do homework together, my bedroom to his student lounge. I could meet the two-dimensional versions of his friends. A perpetual state of will-they-won’t-they without any prospect of seeing each other, or a fleeting new friendship processing the death of a mutual friend in long, desperate gulps of connection – that was all over Skype.

And that was all forgotten, siloed to a particular platform and a particular time, when digital relationships seemed to me a strange, new liminal realm, not an everyday facet of life and before my attention splintered into minute-long intervals. If people are talking about Skype these days, it’s probably in relation to the movie Past Lives, which depicted a relationship over several decades and captured that peculiar intimacy in a chapter of intense, inexpressibly important reconnection over video call. For the film’s release in 2023, I wrote about how the writer-director Celine Song’s inclusion of the classic Skype theme music – that interminable and annoyingly peppy sonar into the deep digital abyss – portaled me straight back to 2011, the same year Nora Moon (Greta Lee) began long-distance video-chatting with her childhood sweetheart Hae Sung (Teo Yoo). Song effectively and accurately rendered the heady rush of long-distance intimacy, the formative kind forgotten under the layers of real life that came after – curled up in bed on hours-long calls, rushing to beat the ringtone clock, awkwardly papering over glitches and lags.

The predominant feeling of Past Lives is the predominant feeling, for me, of Skype: yearning – for a bigger world, for renewed attention, for a bond to remain in place. For a person you could not actually be with. For some way to describe all the emotions caught up in “Skyping”. For the hope that these long video calls could actually substitute for the real thing. It is admittedly difficult to disentangle this yearning from nostalgia for a simpler time with fewer demands on our attention, less omnipresent connection, less overwhelm. When now-faded relationships still had some road left, when tech interfaces felt clumsy and rough, because they were so new. When youth allowed for an endless sense of possibility, and when the intangible weight of relationships, friend or lover or somewhere in between, rested on this hallowed, janky portal to another laptop. The other person haloed in blue light, there but not.

The locus of long-distance connection has long shifted elsewhere, taken root and entwined with normal life. You can now FaceTime someone, text them and check their other digital beams – their Instagram Stories, their Letterboxd logs, their Strava workouts, even their real-time location – from the same screen, in the same minute, with the same impulse. The video quality evolved and proliferated. I got older, and long-distance connection became more a puzzle of screens and streams and time to optimize, less an escape. And Skype straggled on as one of our most ephemeral digital artifacts; there is little for the digital hoarder in its remnants. Unlike text messages or camcorder video or iPhotos or the never-deleting Facebook timelines, there is no archive, no vast library of video to parse through.

skip past newsletter promotion

A weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our lives

Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

after newsletter promotion

Instead, I remember it as a fleeting repository of time and feeling – so much put in, no way to ever measure it or see it again. It wasn’t real life, but it was good enough then, the chipper sound and grainy texture and eager openness of an era. RIP.

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article Save $30 on the Bose QuietComfort earbuds for a limited time
Next Article RSAC 2025: What We Expect at the Largest Cybersecurity Conference of the Year
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

248.1k Like
69.1k Follow
134k Pin
54.3k Follow

Latest News

Two killed & 5 injured in Indianapolis shooting as cops issue parent warning
News
Low-power chip supplier Ambiq Micro files to go public – News
News
Video Production Templates for Effective Planning and Execution
Computing
Bose’s Soundlink Plus Is the Midsize Banger You Didn’t Know You Needed
Gadget

You Might also Like

News

Two killed & 5 injured in Indianapolis shooting as cops issue parent warning

1 Min Read
News

Low-power chip supplier Ambiq Micro files to go public – News

5 Min Read
News

Beware bank-raiding attack on holiday as tourists warned to spot signs

4 Min Read
News

Grafana Tempo 2.8 Released: Major TraceQL Enhancements and Memory Optimizations

3 Min Read
//

World of Software is your one-stop website for the latest tech news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Quick Link

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Topics

  • Computing
  • Software
  • Press Release
  • Trending

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

World of SoftwareWorld of Software
Follow US
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?