Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Software

Slack Buys and Shuts Down Intelligent Email App Astro (engadget.com) 50

Slack has acquired email app company Astro to incorporate it into Slack channels. As a result, Astro is shutting down its Mac, iOS, Android, Alexa and Slack apps. They're no longer taking new users and existing ones will lose access on October 10th. Engadget reports: The company said that with over 50 million channels created to date, they're increasingly becoming the platform through which teams collaborate. "But we all know that email is still a very important tool in business communication," said Slack. "We've taken some steps to make it possible to integrate email into Slack, but now we're in a position to make that interoperability much simpler and much, much more powerful."

Last year, Astro launched its Astrobot Slack app, which let users manage their emails and check their Office 365 or Google calendars from within Slack. It also allowed them to do one search to pull up results from both Slack and email. "As we explored with Slack how to bring together messaging, email and calendar, it became evident that we would have the biggest impact on workplace communications and realize our original vision by joining Slack," the company said.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Slack Buys and Shuts Down Intelligent Email App Astro

Comments Filter:
  • The more you depend on someone else to do your work, the more they bite you in the ass.
  • for people using cloud services. First Zoho, then Astro.

    Impending 365 downtime imminent?

    • for people using cloud services.

      . . . cloud services using people would be a way more interesting banner . . .

      • for people using cloud services.

        . . . cloud services using people would be a way more interesting banner . . .

        You mean using people like the machines did in "The Matrix" ?

  • by davecb ( 6526 ) <davecb@spamcop.net> on Monday September 24, 2018 @06:34PM (#57370454) Homepage Journal
    It's like being in a room full of excitable people, all exclaiming OOH, Shiney! all day.
    • Thank you for taking time out of your busy work day to log into Slashdot, in order to let us know about distraction machines.

      Now, back to work.

      (Also, Flock is way, way worse in terms of being bombarded with obtrusive notifications)

      • Forums are not quite the same as chat. Though the logging in Matrix, Slack, Skype, and Discord makes it less synchronous and ephemeral than IRC, it's still in practice somewhat more synchronous than something like Slashdot, where multiple-paragraph researched replies are commonplace. In something asynchronous like a threaded or nested forum, you can compose replies to several comments on your lunch break and still be seen as a participant in the discussion. And at least one analyst believes that synchronous

    • It's a verbatim copy of IRC running of cloud microservices and web protocols controlled by a single company and used by bazillions because it offers unified branding and apps you can install everywhere. Plus it also offers per account per channel per user chat history that carries over (a thing that is a bit sucky to set up in IRC). You can also integrate it into other cloudy stuff implemented in modern microservices, such as Google Docs.

      Other than that it's just IRC in shiny. ... Which is where the "Shiny"

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

Working...