There is actually no install. The package includes a CD-ROM and the instructions for getting started tell you to update the application software installed on the phone, but it's not necessary, and I'd advise you to skip it.
I confess: I had a . . . philosophical issue with the update process. The software update isn't read off the disk -- it's downloaded across the Internet. Unfortunately (or fortunately, as the case may be), my firewall did not think it was a very good idea to let a program with a totally generic name like autorun.exe drag anything it wanted to onto my PC. I agreed. No software updates are available yet -- I later determined the version number of the available update was the same as the version installed on my phone -- and when an update is necessary, Netgear needs to provide a separate app with a more descriptive name like skypeupdate.exe to manage it.
All you need to do to get started is charge the phone and turn it on. When I did that the handset found my WiFi network without a hitch. (It supports the WEP and WPA-PSK security protocols.) I clicked on "Connect" and then all I had to do was type in my router's 26-digit encryption key accurately. I even surprised myself and got that right the first try.
I was prompted to set up a new account by entering a username and password, and after trying a couple of names that were already taken, I found myself ready to make calls to other Skype users or U.S. phone numbers. Skype-to-Skype calls are free, and "SkypeOut" calls to regular telephones are currently not charged.
If you want to make calls to overseas phones, you must set up a SkypeOut account and pre-fund it to cover Skype's fee of about 2 cents a minute. You can do this through a credit card or especially easily through PayPal -- surely no coincidence, since eBay owns both Skype and Paypal. (You can also buy a "SkypeIn" number that assigns you a telephone number which can be used by callers on regular phones.)
Netgear's handset, dubbed Model SPH101, is a sleek little handful in the candy-bar form factor currently favored by cellphone providers for their low-end free phones. It's a basic instrument -- headset jack but no Bluetooth, camera, games, alarm clock, text messaging, or other frippery.

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Good Audio Quality And Range
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