28 December 2025

Former Skype Staffers Unveil Messaging App

#
Share This Story

Three years after Microsoft Corp. acquired Skype for $8.5 billion, several former staffers of the Internet calling service are introducing a mobile messaging app they hope can outduel the mounting competition. The service, called Wire, combines audio calls with a variety of other tools for sharing media and messages with a group of friends. The app becomes available for download Wednesday in the stores run by Apple Inc. and Google Inc.

Wire is relatively late to the messaging game, considering how quickly some apps have risen to prominence. In the two years Wire was in development, Snapchat Inc., TangoMe Inc., Kik Interactive Inc. and others have collected tens if not hundreds of millions of users and raised venture capital at soaring valuations. Facebook Inc.’s purchase of WhatsApp for $19 billion earlier this year further sparked a flurry of investment in startups vying to develop the next popular communication tools for mobile devices.

For a new entrant in the market to succeed, it is important to have an edge Wire’s most obvious competitive advantage is the pedigree of its team. Jonathan Christensen, Wire’s co-founder and chief executive, sold a startup to Skype Technologies SA in 2006 and served as an executive at the Internet-calling service through its 2011 acquisition by Microsoft. The startup is backed and advised by Janus Friis, one of Skype’s two co-founders, who saw an opportunity to rebuild a communication tool that combines the many ways online users now share information.

Like other services, Wire lets users pull in contacts from their phone contact lists, and suggests other people they might know using the app. Users can set up groups around common interests and be notified every time someone adds a photo or video or text message to the group.

Mr. Christensen said the company has developed new technology to make voice calls sound crisper than on other services. Unlike Facebook and other tools for group messaging, any user can kick others out of a group. Mr. Christensen said this is a more efficient way to manage groups because it avoids the bottlenecks that occur when one or a few administrators have that power.

Users can post SoundCloud and YouTube files by employing embedded players within the app. The company might do more integrations with other types of media in the future. The company eventually plans to earn money by selling add-ons within the app.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

Join Our Online Community
Join the Better Way To Retire community and get access to applications, relevant research, groups and blogs. Let us help you Retire Better™
FamilyWealth Social News
Follow Us