It has a polished and very curious UI. The problem I can see is there is not enough incentive for people to signup. The value proposition is hard to justify. So you just post a question and share a link so people will answer? How is it any better than ASK HN here or reddit?
At least you can give some social login choices to lower the entry barrier.
The target is groups of people that do, more or less, know each other.
This discussions aren't public and given the target the value proposition is discussions without personal bias(anonymity until the end of the discussion).
Can you clarify the part of "anonymity until the end of the discussion". If a friend send me a collAnon link, and I make some uncomplimentary remarks and she will know it was me in the end? How about other people in the discussion?
The discussions, when opened, have an end date, until which all the answers/contributions/comments are anonymous to everyone(including the likes), and when that date is reached everyone can see the best answers.
So yes, she'll know it only in the end. Also for the other people, contributions are made and discussed without having to think about who wrote it but what was written and how much of a good contribution it was(through likes, also visible in the end).
It's a way to skip that part of biased reasoning that could come out and shape the answer when someone knows that he/she is answering its boss/manager/coworker.
What I can't find on the website is the case where a legit user that does already have an account on one of those socials and can still use that same account through this service.
I'm not sure to understand the question. If a user has already used the "Sign in with SimpleLogin" on CollAnon, they will be automatically logged in the next time. There's a demo on https://forum.simplelogin.io
I tried it out in the end but didn't find "anonymous social login", which I assumed its gonna be a middle man service that supports the usual social logins like Facebook, Google, Instagram, etc., but it doesn't seem the case.
I can't really put my finger on why I like it, maybe it's because it uses depth which in todays flat world feels really refreshing.
I'd love to know more about how you ended up with this design language?
(I don't have much feedback on the main app, I don't think I'm the target because I can't figure out when I'd need this vs a completely anonymous private discussion group.)
It all started with neomorphic design, the first time I saw it I liked it a lot(and like you, I was tired of flat design), but alone it does still has its flatness, so I figured out that action elements and inputs can become the less flat elements of this design, so there you have it, neomorphism everywhere :)
There are 2 main drawbacks, the first is about space, which neomorphic design requires to achieve its effect of deepness the second is about layering, the more UI layers you stack up the less the deepness effect is achieved(kind of good I guess because it does force you think of a simple UI/UX)
I think I'll write a blog post about it soon on my blog at blog.thepra.dev
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 45.5 ms ] threadAt least you can give some social login choices to lower the entry barrier.
This discussions aren't public and given the target the value proposition is discussions without personal bias(anonymity until the end of the discussion).
And social logins are next in the bucket list :)
So yes, she'll know it only in the end. Also for the other people, contributions are made and discussed without having to think about who wrote it but what was written and how much of a good contribution it was(through likes, also visible in the end).
It's a way to skip that part of biased reasoning that could come out and shape the answer when someone knows that he/she is answering its boss/manager/coworker.
[1]: https://simplelogin.io/developer/
Do you happen to know about this possibility?
I can't really put my finger on why I like it, maybe it's because it uses depth which in todays flat world feels really refreshing.
I'd love to know more about how you ended up with this design language?
(I don't have much feedback on the main app, I don't think I'm the target because I can't figure out when I'd need this vs a completely anonymous private discussion group.)
There are 2 main drawbacks, the first is about space, which neomorphic design requires to achieve its effect of deepness the second is about layering, the more UI layers you stack up the less the deepness effect is achieved(kind of good I guess because it does force you think of a simple UI/UX)
I think I'll write a blog post about it soon on my blog at blog.thepra.dev
I’ll keep an eye out for that blog post, it sounds like there are some interesting challenges with using it.