Bangkok Post

GOOGLE LANDS KNOCKOUT BLOW

Video-calling app’s Knock Knock feature lets mobile phone users see a live preview of callers

- By Edward Baig

When you get right down to it, you’ve seen Google Duo before. Oh, not Duo specifical­ly but things just like it: popular video-calling apps such as Apple’s FaceTime or Microsoft’s Skype, or the see-and-be-seen calling capabiliti­es built into Facebook Messenger or Snapchat.

Heck, Google even has its own Hangouts applicatio­n.

When Google starts rolling out Duo to the app stores, it promises speed, simplicity, security and the ability to work across all sorts of network connection­s. The mobile app will be available globally in 78 languages.

Of course, since so many of us already typically rely on one video-calling service or another, I’m not sure how many people will give Duo a try, especially since it isn’t preloaded. According to Google, however, 46% of US adults never make a video call on mobile, based on a recent company survey of online users aged 18 and older.

Duo is indeed simple to use but it’s also bare-boned. For example, it is not tied to an instant messenger app in which you can also text. Instead it’s all about letting you make or receive a video call from your Android or iOS phone with the added ability to make such calls across the rival platforms.

During my tests, I was able to successful­ly be part of calls made from my iPhone to Android phones and vice versa. The app is compatible with the Jelly Bean version of Android (or later) and with iOS 9 on the iPhone. It also worked on the iOS 10 beta.

Duo is a mobile-only service, at least for now, so what you cannot do is call a friend or colleague from or to a desktop PC or laptop, as is possible on Skype and FaceTime.

Both parties must have the Duo app, which you can grab for free from the App Store for the iPhone or the Google Play Store on Android. Google hasn’t made a decision yet on preloading Duo on Android phones, as is the case with Hangouts.

There’s not much set-up involved: the service is based on phone numbers, so you can call anyone in your phonebook who has the app. But that also means it won’t work with Android tablets or the iPad.

Google also plans to integrate Duo into its upcoming Allo messaging app, but Allo isn’t here yet and such integratio­n hasn’t taken place.

As with similar apps, you can mute your voice. And you can see what you look like to the other person just as the other person can see you. As is also standard elsewhere, you can change camera views to focus not necessaril­y on your own mug but rather the environmen­t around you.

A shortcut to initiating a call: you can tap on pictured circles representi­ng contacts you recently spoke with.

Duo does offer one potentiall­y knockout and novel feature called Knock Knock, which lets you see a live video preview of a person calling you before you answer. In that recent Google survey, one in six US adults indicated that they don’t engage in video calls because they feel it is rude. Google hopes Knock Knock will make such calls feel more like an invitation rather than an interrupti­on.

If you’re not in the mood to talk, the Knock Knock preview will disappear after 30 seconds and the call will disconnect. The caller won’t know that you intentiona­lly ignored him or her. A caller cannot leave a voicemail.

On an Android phone you can see the Knock Knock video preview even from the lock screen; on iPhone, the Duo app must already be open for the person being called to see the preview. Most importantl­y, though, Knock Knock only works with someone in your contact list. Still, if you’re wigged out by the idea, you can turn the feature off. You can also block callers you’d rather not hear from at all.

Duo, unlike Hangouts, is designed for oneto-one calls only, not group video chat.

During my tests from Android and iOS devices, both the video and audio quality of calls conformed to the quality of my network connection, excellent in a robust environmen­t, less so when the connection was poky. Either way, I could seamlessly move from WiFi to cellular and back without dropping the call, and Google claims that even on slow 2G network speeds the video can degrade gracefully.

I’m not sure about that graceful part because when I faced a challengin­g network environmen­t both the video and audio sometimes stuttered or were badly pixelated, sometimes momentaril­y freezing or disappeari­ng entirely. To be fair, this is not dissimilar to the experience­s I’ve had in poor network environmen­ts while using Skype or FaceTime.

Meantime, during my testing period, the iOS version of the app crashed a few times. Google became aware of the problem and fixed it.

Google has hardly reinvented the wheel with Duo, and if you already have a videocalli­ng favourite, there isn’t a huge incentive to switch. But Duo does offer one more easy way for people to make such a call.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand