
Just seems to me like there's a gap in the market for a personal email, calendar, drive solution with some innovative features. Also, it only really works if are invested in the ecosystem. Recently there's Basecamp's Hey, but it's purely email.Īpple is moving in the right direction, but iCloud Drive is still a weird hybrid file system and the lack of browser based Pages, Keynote, Numbers is missing. You are not allowed to disclose this request to public. In order to bypass end-to-end encryption for this user, push a malicious update to the mobile app or desktop browser of this user at this IP address, and 2. Microsoft 365, is well, Microsoft - you either love it or hate it. ProtonMail, which claims to be a 'secure e-mail service from Switzerland,' supplies user data to security authorities. How can the 'search' function be so bad from a Search Engine company? Gmail is hasn't changed much in a decade Docs, Slides, Sheets are fine, but Drive is an absolute pile of junk. The last time someone messed with email successfully was (now defunct) Google 'Inbox'. But it feels like personal email, calendars and cloud storage is ripe for disruption. I'm a conceptual creative and product designer, so I know how hard what I am suggesting is. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but why just build the expected? So it's understandable.īeyond encryption - and I could be wrong here - so far I haven't seen any new innovative or paradigm shifting features, everything is 'as expected'. But, given their USP is 'encryption', if speed-to-market compromises it in anyway - there will be a huge backlash. You won't be able to pry me away from Dropbox.

I've been a user for a few years and while I love Mail, if I could just get email reminders I could actually use Calendar! Drive is promising, but unless there are some standard features i.e.
