Apple bought the "FaceTime" name from FaceTime Communications, which changed its name to
Actiance in January 2011. On June 7, 2010, Apple CEO
Steve Jobs announced FaceTime in conjunction with the
iPhone 4 in a
keynote speech at the
2010 Apple Worldwide Developers Conference. Support for the fourth-generation
iPod Touch (the first model of iPod Touch equipped with cameras) was announced in conjunction with the device's release on September 8, 2010. On March 2, 2011, FaceTime support was announced for the newly introduced
iPad 2, which had forward- and rear-facing cameras. On February 24, 2011, FaceTime left beta and was listed in the
Mac App Store for
US$0.99. Apple claimed that it had intended to provide the application free of charge but that a provision of the
Sarbanes–Oxley Act (2002) barred it from providing an unadvertised new feature in an already-sold product without enduring "onerous accounting measures". The US$0.99 beta is no longer available for download from Apple. FaceTime is included for free in macOS from (10.7) onwards and iOS. In May 2011, it was found that FaceTime would work seamlessly over
3G on all iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch models that supported it. Even though FaceTime worked only over 3G at that time, it now supports
4G LTE calls on networks all over the world, and availability is limited to operators' GSM plans. In 2018, Apple added group video and audio support to FaceTime, which could support up to 32 people in
iOS 12 and
macOS Mojave. The
5th generation iPad Pro, introduced in May 2021, features '''''', which allows the camera to follow a user when on a FaceTime call, and was expanded to other third-party video conferencing applications. A feature of all iPads released since 2021, Center Stage is available on Macs using the
Apple Studio Display or a paired iPhone with an
Apple A13 or newer chip. Continuity Camera, a feature that allows Macs to use iPhones as a camera, was introduced in
iOS 16 and
macOS Ventura. On June 7, 2021, during Apple's WWDC Keynote, it was announced that FaceTime would be made available for Android and Windows users via the web. A new feature called SharePlay, announced for FaceTime on
iOS 15,
iPadOS 15, and
macOS Monterey, enables users on iPhone, iPad, and Mac share music, video, or their screen with people on the call. Apple stated that the feature uses an
API that can be enabled on any media service and SharePlay was slated to support
Apple Music, the
Apple TV app (including
Apple TV+),
Disney+,
Hulu,
HBO Max,
Paramount+,
TikTok,
Twitch, and several other media sources at launch. FaceTime was added to
Apple TV 4K (second-generation and newer models) with the release of
tvOS 17 in 2023. FaceTime requires a paired iPhone or iPad with
iOS 17/
iPadOS 17 and supports Center Stage and Split View with an A13 device or newer. FaceTime added Live Translations to one-on-ones calls in 2025 for apple intelligence devices running iOS 26. Live speech can be transcribed and translated immediately. However, English, French, German, Portuguese, and Spanish are the only supported languages for this update. ==Implementation==