Well I was not sure whether if I can get into a company without any degree in computer field, there are times I wonder if it would have been better me doing CS than medicine from the beginning
Focusing on making it medical related won't increase your chances by much if at all, only to narrow your opportunities. If you can code, it shouldn't matter. Speaking from experience and from people I know personally, your lack of a degree isn't the main deterrent from getting a job programming in most cases
Company A. I value personal growth and happiness over pay differences. And it seems like Company A will help me more base on what vague information is provided.
1. I have no clue what you mean by a "background messenger".
2. The title used here and the text on the site doesn't correlate the same message to me.
3. I have no clue why I would want to install this if it lets others spy on what I do (I assume thats how you allow people to keep up to date such as how much battery life I have left?)
Perhaps I'm just not understanding. Can you clarify?
1. "background messenger" = Content is created in the background (ie what you're up to at a high level comes from the phone versus you needing to manually input it), and then you can see what other people are up to before you message them. We've worked on a couple ways to better describe this -- the two components of both creating content passively/in the background, and using that info as a springboard into messaging -- and other ideas were "contextual messenger," "automatic away message," and "passive messenger." It's been tough to find a description that captures those two elements -- any preferences based on those alternatives (or ideas)?
2. Definitely a fair point -- "background messenger" is the quick couple word decriptor (as in, Facebook is a social network), and "A window into your best friends' lives / Waldo keeps you in the loop, all the time" is the value prop we're trying to convey. I think you make a good point, though, that bridging those two needs work.
3. This has been one of the more interesting challenges -- getting away from the notion that it's for spying on / being spied on. The goal of the app is to help you stay connected to the most important people in your life by providing an authentic window into their world, wherever they may be, without them having to manually update all the time.
So we make sure of three things: one, you're only sharing high-level location (ie it's 'Out in SOMA' and not your dot on a map), and you can go hidden whenever you like. Two, there's no feed or history, it's only real-time -- so there's no "where was Tom last Tuesday" kind of thing anyone can do. And three, it's with a close-knit group of people -- it's a very different audience than public/FB friends/Twitter followers, and you can block anyone you don't want.
We're seeing people use it to save a text when coordinating (see if someone's already on their way) and also, more interestingly, to stay in rhythm with people they're close with who may not by nearby -- instead of a 30 minute call to parents or a sibling recounting the week, people use it to feel closer to what those close friends and family are up to when they can't be there, and then have richer interactions when they do connect.
Appreciate you checking it out and the feedback -- hope this helps explain some, and I definitely hear you on explaining the value proposition more clearly. Thanks a lot.
Maybe it's just me because what you see in product hunt now, is exactly how I saw it since the beginning. I could never get myself to care to check it at all in the way I do HN
I think fixing their back order problem is more crucial than constantly announcing new versions at this point. I ordered before 1.0 and still waiting...