Impressive visual design and extensive copywriting in the promo parts of the app. The idea is heavily tried and a very busy market i should say. Best of luck then to the dev(s)
Interesting feature list except that they seem to promise everything but the kitchen sink. I'm pretty sure you can only go downhill from there.
Signed up for an account and no activation email. I don't know if it will ever arrive. If it does arrive I will likely have moved on by then.Requiring an activation email seems like a bad idea. Get the customer in the door as smoothly as possible. Figure out how to deal with your spam issues yourself, don't push that task on the customer.
Tried to log in anyways. It seems that most services which ask you to activate will still allow you to log in without activation. Entered my username / password, clicked login and nothing happens (Firefox 25 on Linux.)
At this point I'm thinking only further disappointment awaits. They can't even get the login process correct, how are they going to deliver on the rest?
ETA:
The signup process actually mentions that you should check your spam box if you don't get the activation email. If you have to mention that, then I assume it has been a problem for you. I don't see how this can be a problem for people these days. I rarely see this with apps I sign up with and with services such as Mandrill available, it's just not something you should have to deal with. It's an important step not to screw up.
Ah, the login button sends a POST request and returns a "status". If you enter an incorrect username or password, then it does pop up an error. So, I assume it does require that you activate your account. It should return some sort of message though. Lame.
The email did actually go to spam. Crazy. Logged in, the icons were slow to load, which resulted in what looked to be a totally broken layout.
The calendar layout has a tooltip in the upper right corner which goes outside my browser window. I can't horizontal scroll to see what it says.
When I click on the icon for settings, the dialogue box with the options pops up for 3 seconds and disappears automatically. That's not even enough time for me to read what all the options are. I have to click on it multiple times.
The whole thing continues to be slow. Icons load slow. Ajax feels unresponsive. This gives it the constant feel of being broken.
The app looks decent but I get the feeling like the designer has better skills in creating a showcase rather than an actual working app.
The feature list is way more ambitious than what the app appears to be. It's actually quite simple. The person writing up the content seems to have a great imagination. Sort of like "100 uses for a screwdriver." You read the 100 uses and then get disappointed when someone hands you the screwdriver (assuming you have never seen a screwdriver before.)
What I do like about it is that it's a management app which seems to focus on just one person rather than a whole team. I think there is space for this sort of thing. I work alone, I want something which isn't loaded with team / collaboration features.
The Twitter account is posting mostly in Spanish. Maybe they should have an English account as well. I wonder how other companies deal with this? It seems to me that you should always default to English for everything, otherwise you limit your audience. If your English is poor, then get someone to write for you. The Twitter feed should also have more than just filler fluff.
You could probably use a blog.It would help give you something to show up in search engines and give you another channel for communicating with customers.
What really kills it for me is the speed. I regularly feel like I'm waiting for it to catch up. I assume the mobile app is much better. Maybe the web app was just an afterthought / second class citizen.
The other issue is that I don't know that I can trust it. In these days of hackers, crackers and NSA spying, I want to know that you guys know what you are doing, and a partially broken experience doesn't make me feel good about it. This is an especially big conce...
2 comments
[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 11.7 ms ] threadSigned up for an account and no activation email. I don't know if it will ever arrive. If it does arrive I will likely have moved on by then.Requiring an activation email seems like a bad idea. Get the customer in the door as smoothly as possible. Figure out how to deal with your spam issues yourself, don't push that task on the customer.
Tried to log in anyways. It seems that most services which ask you to activate will still allow you to log in without activation. Entered my username / password, clicked login and nothing happens (Firefox 25 on Linux.)
At this point I'm thinking only further disappointment awaits. They can't even get the login process correct, how are they going to deliver on the rest?
ETA:
The signup process actually mentions that you should check your spam box if you don't get the activation email. If you have to mention that, then I assume it has been a problem for you. I don't see how this can be a problem for people these days. I rarely see this with apps I sign up with and with services such as Mandrill available, it's just not something you should have to deal with. It's an important step not to screw up.
Ah, the login button sends a POST request and returns a "status". If you enter an incorrect username or password, then it does pop up an error. So, I assume it does require that you activate your account. It should return some sort of message though. Lame.
The email did actually go to spam. Crazy. Logged in, the icons were slow to load, which resulted in what looked to be a totally broken layout.
The calendar layout has a tooltip in the upper right corner which goes outside my browser window. I can't horizontal scroll to see what it says.
When I click on the icon for settings, the dialogue box with the options pops up for 3 seconds and disappears automatically. That's not even enough time for me to read what all the options are. I have to click on it multiple times.
The whole thing continues to be slow. Icons load slow. Ajax feels unresponsive. This gives it the constant feel of being broken.
The app looks decent but I get the feeling like the designer has better skills in creating a showcase rather than an actual working app.
The feature list is way more ambitious than what the app appears to be. It's actually quite simple. The person writing up the content seems to have a great imagination. Sort of like "100 uses for a screwdriver." You read the 100 uses and then get disappointed when someone hands you the screwdriver (assuming you have never seen a screwdriver before.)
What I do like about it is that it's a management app which seems to focus on just one person rather than a whole team. I think there is space for this sort of thing. I work alone, I want something which isn't loaded with team / collaboration features.
The Twitter account is posting mostly in Spanish. Maybe they should have an English account as well. I wonder how other companies deal with this? It seems to me that you should always default to English for everything, otherwise you limit your audience. If your English is poor, then get someone to write for you. The Twitter feed should also have more than just filler fluff.
You could probably use a blog.It would help give you something to show up in search engines and give you another channel for communicating with customers.
What really kills it for me is the speed. I regularly feel like I'm waiting for it to catch up. I assume the mobile app is much better. Maybe the web app was just an afterthought / second class citizen.
The other issue is that I don't know that I can trust it. In these days of hackers, crackers and NSA spying, I want to know that you guys know what you are doing, and a partially broken experience doesn't make me feel good about it. This is an especially big conce...