Open wireless Internet hotspots will soon serve as virtual phone booths, as four manufacturers plan to introduce Wi-Fi handsets
for Skype's popular VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) telephony service this quarter.
The phones can be used at open Wi-Fi access points that do not require browser authentication, and come preloaded with Skype
software, Skype said Thursday. The move is designed to give Skype users the mobility of a cell phone, but retain the ability
to use the eBay-owned telephony company's free or inexpensive calling rates, Skype said. There is no difference in fees for
calls made from Wi-Fi phones than for those made from PCs.
Belkin, Accton Technology's Edge-Core, Netgear, and Standard Microsystems are all introducing the handsets to support the
new service. The phones will hit the market in the third quarter, Skype said, and will be sold directly from the Skype online
store. Edge-Core's phone, which features and a color LCD (liquid crystal display) screen, carries a suggested retail price
of €199 ($251), excluding value-added tax (VAT). Netgear's phone is displayed on the Skype store, listed as "coming soon"
and priced at £140 ($258), inclusive of VAT.