I've been a professional C, Perl, PHP and Python developer.
I'm an ex-sysadmin from the late 20th century.
These days I do more Javascript and CSS and whatnot, and promote UX and accessibility.
I'm not entirely sure why people would choose Hey in the first place. I don't think it offered any novel features, and from this post I can see that the only things you wanted to replicate in your new provider are things that most cloudy-email services provide.
I'm not entirely sure why people would choose Hey in the first place. I don't think it offered any novel features, and from this post I can see that the only things you wanted to replicate in your new provider are things that most cloudy-email services provide.
HEY did have a novel feeling and flow to me, features not that much, indeed.