* Note: This story has been updated. The original version stated Skype Mobile 911 calls are delivered over 3G. In fact, they revert back to the device dialer and are carried on Verizon's voice network. advertisement Verizon Wireless users with Android-based devices – most notably the popular Motorola Droid – are not able to run the new Skype Mobile client with the phone’s Wi-Fi radio turned on. The consequence: Users can either turn Wi-Fi on the device off completely, forcing all data services to run over the Verizon 3G network, or leave Wi-Fi on and be unable to use Skype Mobile to make calls or even have it running in the background, the major of appeal of the app in the first place. News of this quirk came this week courtesy of Skype Journal, whose editor Phil Wolff ran into the problem when testing Skype Mobile on a Motorola Droid device (see screen capture). The fact that the Verizon Skype Mobile implementation doesn’t use Wi-Fi as its network connection isn’t news; the realization that Android users cannot turn on Wi-Fi at all while using the app is. In an interview, Verizon said the problem was not designed to force users onto its 3G data network or for any other nefarious intent. It also said the problem only occurs on Android-based devices; for instance, the Skype Mobile client does not have the same problem running on RIM Blackberry phones. Nonetheless, Verizon did admit the glitch was a problem for users of its much-hyped Skype Mobile offering and said it was working with Google, device manufacturers and the Skype Mobile development team to find a fix. The Wi-Fi problems are ironic because many early mobile VoIP applications – especially on Apple’s iPhone – are available only on Wi-Fi, not 3G. The problem represents Read More