Continuing on from Part 1 where I looked at the new user interface in the Skype 5.0 Beta for MacOS X including using chats and making audio calls, let’s look at video and the new Group Video.
Video – and Group Video
Making a video call is very much the same experience as an audio call – make the call with the video button next to your contact or press the video button in a audio call. You get your standard small “preview” screen and you see the person you are calling. You can pull up the video window so that you can see the chat. If you don’t move the mouse over the window for a bit, the controls fade away so that you see the entire screen of the other persons video. All in all pretty nicely done:

(And yes, I deliberately covered some of the names of the chats. 🙂 ) For those curious, the person I’m calling is Chaim Haas who works with PR for Skype.
Adding someone else in launches the Group Video feature where you first have to accept that you are joining a “trial”:

No clue what will happen in 28 days when the trial expires… but whatever…
The result is a great 3-way conversation via video – and yes, Chaim had two separate laptops running 5.0 (one Windows, one Mac) so we brought in two different accounts he had:

Just to show that it could work with more people, we brought in a colleague of Chaim’s:

I found it interesting to note that Skype 5.0 identifies the person currently speaking with green on their name (although with video I would think it’s a bit easier to see who is talking).
Note, too, that at the bottom there is another person, Adam Hirsch, below the line. Chaim mistakenly added him to the call at the same time he added his colleague, but what’s interesting is that because I was the organizer, the new person was not automatically added to the call. Instead, I had to approve them joining the call (as I did with Chaim’s colleague). You can also do some funky things like minimize some of the video sessions so that you see one larger than the others:

The other video sessions are continuing to stream and you can see by the green that Aziza was the one speaking at the precise time I snapped this video.
My screenshots have shown the group video taking up the whole screen, but you can also expose the sidebar and see all your chats/conversations:

Here is one major difference with the “one window” paradigm. You can switch over to any of your chats to participate in the chat – but you can’t see the video any longer. You are still sending video, of course, you can’t see it until you switch back to the call window. Previously with the multiple windows you could resize the video to fit in one part of your screen and simultaneously have your chats open in a separate window.
Screen Sharing
Like the previous 2.8 client, Skype 5.0 Beta for MacOS X supports screen sharing, although with one change – you can only share your full screen and not a region of the screen:

I don’t know how many people used the ability to share a selection of the screen, but I know that from time to time I did. Hopefully that might be something they’ll bring back in a later beta or release.
Flipped Video
One funky thing I did notice in my test with Chaim was that my local video – the image of my myself that I see, turns out to be flipped horizontally. (And this turns out to be the case for the Skype 5.0 for Windows client as well.) I probably wouldn’t have noticed… except that when Chaim shared his screen showing my video on Skype I noticed that my direction of viewing was reversed. A subsequent holding up of a book rather directly verified that:

Not a big deal… the recipient of the call is seeing the correct viewing angle. It is only you who see the flipped video.
Wrapping Up
Combined with the first part of this review, that pretty much does it for a tour of the Skype 5.0 Beta for Mac. After two days of usage I’m still getting used to the new UI. I’ve been using Skype for 5 or 6 years now and using it almost entirely on the Mac for the past 3 years… so I’ve gotten very used to my certain way of working with Skype… and this new UI fundamentally changes so much of that. I realize, though, that I probably push some of the features and use it more heavily than many people do. I’ll try to summarize my overall opinion in another post.
Meanwhile, what do you all think? If you are a Mac user, are you going to give the Skype 5.0 Beta a try? If you have done so already, what do you think of it so far?
If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:
“I don’t know how many people used the ability to share a selection of the screen, but I know that from time to time I did. Hopefully that might be something they’ll bring back in a later beta or release.”
Hmmm that’s like FUCKING EVERYBODY DOES THAT!!!
Skype doesn’t get there priorities right. Really who cares about Facebook chat or WHATEVER.
It’s 2012 and we cannot share a portion of a screen… how retarded is that!
PING:
TITLE: Now We Know What Happens When The Skype Group Video Free Trial Expires…
BLOG NAME: Disruptive Telephony
When Skype released Group Video Calling with Skype for Mac 5.0 Beta (see my earlier written review and video review), one of the major questions was: What will happen to group video calling when the free trial ends? Skype representatives…
PING:
TITLE: Skype 5.0 Beta for Mac OS X: A First Look with Screenshots
BLOG NAME: Disruptive Telephony
Could it really be true? Was Skype actually delivering a MacOS X version that was close to parity with the Skype for Windows version? After all the complaining we Mac users have done? Yes, indeed, for better or worse, today…
Not being able to share a selection of the screen is a rather big drawback for me. I often used it to show a part of my 23″ screen to contacts using a smaller screen. Also it saves band width when sharing the screen on the road or to countries like Argentina.
Nice review thank you.
Do you know if the beta also includes support for the h.264 codec. Currently there is a goundswell of disgruntled customers who have bought the Freetalk Camera for the Samsung TV to use Skype. Only to find that it does not work for calls to Mac users because of this problem.
Thanks
Bernhard, I definitely agree that not being able to share a part of the screen is a drawback. I used it when demonstrating items to people to be able to effectively “zoom in” on part of the screen and just focus on that section. I would like to hope that Skype will bring that back in during the 5.0 Beta process, but friends using 5.0 on Windows say that they only have the ability to share a full screen… so that may be the way that Skype is going, which would be unfortunate.
Dave, thanks for commenting. My understanding from others is that the H.264 codec is NOT supported in this initial beta. Now having said that, I’ve not done much testing with video myself so I can’t vouch for that. Serious bummer about that camera! I can understand why folks are disgruntled. Hopefully Skype will add in this support through the beta process.
Hi – thanks for the review. I do like the new feature but for some reason I am not able to find the video call at all. When I am in an active call, my partner can see my and himself but I do not see the video screen nor do i see a button that will show it?
Help!?
Mathieu
Mathieu, Hmmm… I don’t know what to tell you. I haven’t seen that behavior myself. I just click on the small icon for the video camera and I am able to send my video. You might try posting a comment over in the Skype Forums and see if someone there can help: http://forums.skype.com/
Has anyone figured out how to turn a 1:1 video call full screen? For the life of me I can only maximize the window, but can’t make it total full screen like I used to.