It's just a MVP... version 0.01 of their vision. The fact that they have paying users who use them daily is a very, very good signal - that's a hard thing to do! It's so much easier to add additional features to that group of users later.
The V in MVP stands for viable. Things that aren’t viable aren’t MVPs they are steps getting to an MVP. Part of the value of testing stuff is to check and see if what I think is an MVP is, actually is. When it clearly isn’t, if I call it an MVP then I’m either insane or a marketing person.
Prototypes are perfectly cool as long as expectations are met. Of course, charging $10 for a prototype doesn’t frequently work
We built a chrome extension that lets you load your calendar from any website quickly without switching context (i.e. switch to another tab or app).
I personally have a busy calendar, and didn't like jumping in and out of GCal 30 times a day: every 20 minutes, I'd go in to GCal to check my upcoming events, create a meeting, or do some other simple action. Each of them doesn't take long - always under a minute. However, the annoying part was that I'd forget about what I was working on before - the cost of context-switching.
That is why we built a non-immersive calendar experience. An user would hit a shortcut to load up their calendar nearly instantly on the page itself. From there, Motion makes actions like creating events or sharing availability easier with better UX and built-in workflows. For example, to share your availabilities with someone, Motion automates that workflow (by using your personal preferences and running a logic on existing events to maximize maker's time). Once you are done using the calendar, just hit escape to get rid of it. You haven't left the page at all.
We are also working on a desktop app, as we'd love to use the calendar inside apps like Zoom and PyCharm.
We believe this kind of non-immersive approach can apply to all actions that take less than a minute - such as checking the email you just received or viewing a Jira ticket. For longer tasks that require deeper focus, an immersive experience is necessary - such as note-taking or coding. Here's our vision: in the future, whenever you need to perform a quick action in another app, instead of switching over to that app, Motion would bring to you the only component you need (an input form, a message, a textbox...etc).
We'd love to hear your feedback, and let us know what other apps would benefit from this non-immersive approach.
We built a chrome extension that lets you load your calendar from any website quickly without switching context (i.e. switch to another tab or app).
I personally have a busy calendar, and didn't like jumping in and out of GCal 30 times a day: every 20 minutes, I'd go in to GCal to check my upcoming events, create a meeting, or do some other simple action. Each of them doesn't take long - always under a minute. However, the annoying part was that I'd forget about what I was working on before - the cost of context-switching.
That is why we built a non-immersive calendar experience. An user would hit a shortcut to load up their calendar nearly instantly on the page itself. From there, Motion makes actions like creating events or sharing availability easier with better UX and built-in workflows. For example, to share your availabilities with someone, Motion automates that workflow (by using your personal preferences and running a logic on existing events to maximize maker's time). Once you are done using the calendar, just hit escape to get rid of it. You haven't left the page at all.
We are also working on a desktop app, as we'd love to use the calendar inside apps like Zoom and PyCharm.
We believe this kind of non-immersive approach can apply to all actions that take less than a minute - such as checking the email you just received or viewing a Jira ticket. For longer tasks that require deeper focus, an immersive experience is necessary - such as note-taking or coding. Here's our vision: in the future, whenever you need to perform a quick action in another app, instead of switching over to that app, Motion would bring to you the only component you need (an input form, a message, a textbox...etc).
We'd love to hear your feedback, and let us know what other apps would benefit from this non-immersive approach.
Thanks for recommending that. We actually do one better - we not only count time when browser tab is active, but also stop counting time when we don't detect activity or video playing for longer than 5 minutes :)
That sounds very valid - when we built this, we had the working mentality, but unwanted distraction when relaxing would definitely be useful for ourselves.
I see so many negative comments and can't help but think of this (first comment on DropBox's HN launch): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8863