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Truecaller launches Truedialer app that displays identities in outgoing calls


Phone directory application Truecaller launched a new app, Truedialer, which will offer users details of a person before the outgoing call is connected.
The app is available for download on Google Play store.

Truedialer gives instant access to relevant information about contacts that users are trying to dial, it said in a statement.
If users are dialing a number for an individual or business outside of their phonebook, they will be able to see the name and a profile photo of whom they are about to dial before they place the call. 

The integration of the Truecaller technology works in conjunction with Truedialer, it said.
However, the company currently has no plans of integrating the apps to offer a unified experience to users.

Truecaller globally has 85 million users. This is a free mobile application which shows name of the person calling to the user even if the number is not saved in the phone.
The Stockholm-based firm has over 200,000 new users joining daily and almost half of this are from India. About 40 million of its userbase is from India.
With Truedialer, users can automatically search for information about a number they are dialing.

“Until now, phone dial pads have not truly improved since the feature phone days. With the same infrastructure that powers Truecaller, our ambition with Truedialer is to replace the phone?s phonebook app,” Truecaller co-founder and Chief Strategy Officer Nami Zarringhalam said. 

Earlier this month, Truecaller had received a funding of USD 60 million (over Rs. 368 crore) from a group of investors, including Atomico and Sequoia Capital.
It had said the firm will use the Series C round of financing to fuel product development, hire new talent and expand the company’s global footprint, including in its largest market India.
In February, it had received USD 18.8 million in funding, led by Sequoia Capital, bringing the total investment in the company to more than USD 80 million.

Google Hangouts allows free one-minute international calls in 25 countries



Google has announced that the first minute of voice calls through Hangouts will be free in 25 countries.
Earlier reports had suggested Google may shut down Google Voice and integrate it into Hangouts
Google’s Hangouts app for desktops and mobile will allowed users to instant message, make free domestic voice calls, video chat and calls to phone numbers (including free calls to US and Canada) using an internet connection.

However, you shall need to have some calling credit in your Google account to get your first minute free, as you’ll be charged for the duration of your call beyond that first minute.
Google also says that this free quick call offering will be available for the rest of the year.
Android users can try the Hangouts Dailer app on their device.
The 25 countries where the new Hangouts feature is accessible include Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, Dominican Republic, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, Peru, Poland, Russia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, U.K. and the U.S.

Google Hangouts is available for download for Android, iOS and your desktop.

WhatsApp won’t get Voice-Calling feature till early 2015: report

Leaked image shows VoIP for WhatsApp

The much expected voice-calling service for WhatsApp has been delayed and will arrive in the first quarter of 2015. Earlier reports had suggested that the update would be released in the second quarter of  2014. WhatsApp’s CEO Jan Koum had made the announcement at the 2014 Mobile World Congress. He was quoted as saying, “We are going to introduce voice in WhatsApp in the second quarter of this year”. According to Koum’s announcement, it was revealed that the service would first come to Android and iOS, followed by Windows and BlackBerry.

Now it appears that there has been a delay in plans. Speaking at the Code/Mobile event by Re/Code, Jan said that the company is facing some technical hurdles. One of the reasons why voice calling has not yet been activated is because the company is finding ways to implement voice calling services in areas where Internet connectivity is poor and 3G services and Wi-Fi access is restricted and thus where people are still on 2G services.
According to the CEO, this feature will not clash with Facebook Messenger which already has  voice calling over WiFi. He said that although the two are similar in nature, WhatsApp is a strictly mobile only service and will not compete with Messenger offering, which is accessible via Desktops as well. Facebook had acquired WhatsApp earlier this year.

Koum adds, “Before [the acquisition] we experimented with monetisation, we tried to charge in some countries,” Koum told Re/code’s Liz Gannes at the Code/Mobile conference on Tuesday. “We didn’t have the long-term financial support of Facebook.”
The company tried to make profits by charging users in a few countries before the acquisition, but they generated only $10 million in revenue in 2013. That revenue came from user subscriptions, not social ads which drive the bulk of Facebook’s revenue. Koum says, WhatsApp has “no plans” to bring advertising into its app.
Voice calling on WhatsApp can also give competition to popular apps such as Viber, LINE and Skype. Hopefully, we shall see the launch of voice calling for WhatsApp by the first quarter of 2015.

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