I loved talking to Slack CEO @stewart on The Vergecast this week, and there is tons to pull out of the conversation, but just for @backlon I asked why the desktop app is still Electron. https://t.co/ZMM6CXYWPO pic.twitter.com/i1JLIPyh7r
— nilay patel (@reckless) May 26, 2020
Thought this was a really interesting answer about whether Slack needs to build a video conferencing tool to compete with Zoom, or somehow partner with Zoom. https://t.co/ZMM6CXYWPO pic.twitter.com/CllGHMkPFa
— nilay patel (@reckless) May 26, 2020
Slack CEO @stewart joins @reckless on The Vergecast to talk about competing with Microsoft, the future of work, and managing all those notifications https://t.co/Xo938r83bp pic.twitter.com/Kd2G3KeYRb
— The Verge (@verge) May 26, 2020
Slack is looking to add support for scheduled messages and more control over notifications https://t.co/Bjiwi5vOMH pic.twitter.com/HVbXt8QzBv
— The Verge (@verge) May 26, 2020
Slack CEO: Microsoft is "unhealthily preoccupied with killing us" https://t.co/ffBbtbbXg0 pic.twitter.com/OqlEYAa5go
— The Verge (@verge) May 26, 2020
Slack CEO: Microsoft is "unhealthily preoccupied with killing us." We got to interview Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield and he’s provided his clearest thoughts on the Microsoft Teams competition yet. Details here: https://t.co/nkrkvn0zKV pic.twitter.com/nHQvRL0pRC
— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) May 26, 2020
Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield told me that "Microsoft is perhaps unhealthily obsessed with killing us" on the Vergecast this week. @tomwarren pulls it apart: https://t.co/IhhmOLVo4m pic.twitter.com/EUpLPJ8p4w
— nilay patel (@reckless) May 26, 2020
"There’s going to be more companies, more dollars spent per employee per year. More minutes spent in software every year. That’s just an inevitability."@stewart making the bull case for SaaS (case in point: @SlackHQ buys from 450 software vendors!)https://t.co/hSLMajAdSj
— Boris Wertz (@bwertz) May 26, 2020
Slack is looking to add support for scheduled messages and more control over notifications https://t.co/djR1Frn7D3 pic.twitter.com/Yuy4HgVB89
— The Verge (@verge) May 27, 2020