Yes.Gale Andrews wrote:This is when you use Skype without even recording it?
"Full duplex" allows bidirectional data simultaneously. "Emulation" fakes a similar effect. Time division duplexing (TDD) is one way to emulate full duplex, but it isn't full duplex. There are different forms of TDD including "half-duplex" (like a walkie-talkie ... "over"...), Code division multiple access (CDMA), and others. Duplexing can be emulated quite convincingly when the data is digital and can be compressed, by alternating "packets" of data (several different standards for doing this).Gale Andrews wrote:I thought mobile and VoIP offered full-duplex emulation ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplex_%28 ... _emulation ) so that theoretically, parties should be able to speak simultaneously.
Regardless of the duplexing method (and I don't know the details for cell phones), the communication flow is managed. Many cell phones can be used on a "speaker phone" setting. If it were not managed it would certainly produce an audio feedback loop. To prevent that, at each end, either the speaker or the mic is active, but not both at the same time, so each end is either "transmitting" or "receiving" but not both simultaneously.
On top of that, Skype (by default) dynamically adjusts the mic level with a form of automatic gain control (AGC). There's a lot that can go wrong, and Skype's claim to fame is that they've got it all to work pretty well by tightly controlling the entire system, but that does not lend itself to easy recording.