Comment by obrajesse 11 years ago They got the team behind it, who now work on other parts of Dropobox 12 comments obrajesse Reply BradRuderman 11 years ago Right by why maintain the chat app? Why not just buy slack. egypturnash 11 years ago Buying Slack requires Slack to be interested in selling themselves. npizzolato 11 years ago You're misinterpreting him. "Buy" here is purchasing the product, as a typical customer. cjbprime 11 years ago You're assuming:* that Slack was for sale too* that Dropbox wanted the app, rather than the people who made the app jfb 11 years ago Slack is out for a lot of groups that don't particularly want internal, private communications routed through a third-party. uptown 11 years ago GOTO 10 fletchowns 11 years ago I don't understand why you are being downvoted for legitimate questions. npizzolato 11 years ago Same. It's kind of sad. Apparently questioning the business reason behind decisions isn't appreciated. I personally find them interesting. BradRuderman 11 years ago I mean the slack product! rrdharan 11 years ago BradRuderman you are conflating two different things that are not necessarily related:(1) How Dropbox chooses to satisfy internal requirements/demand for a group chat solution(2) Why/whether Dropbox should have acquired/acqhired the Zulip team 1 reply →
BradRuderman 11 years ago Right by why maintain the chat app? Why not just buy slack. egypturnash 11 years ago Buying Slack requires Slack to be interested in selling themselves. npizzolato 11 years ago You're misinterpreting him. "Buy" here is purchasing the product, as a typical customer. cjbprime 11 years ago You're assuming:* that Slack was for sale too* that Dropbox wanted the app, rather than the people who made the app jfb 11 years ago Slack is out for a lot of groups that don't particularly want internal, private communications routed through a third-party. uptown 11 years ago GOTO 10 fletchowns 11 years ago I don't understand why you are being downvoted for legitimate questions. npizzolato 11 years ago Same. It's kind of sad. Apparently questioning the business reason behind decisions isn't appreciated. I personally find them interesting. BradRuderman 11 years ago I mean the slack product! rrdharan 11 years ago BradRuderman you are conflating two different things that are not necessarily related:(1) How Dropbox chooses to satisfy internal requirements/demand for a group chat solution(2) Why/whether Dropbox should have acquired/acqhired the Zulip team 1 reply →
egypturnash 11 years ago Buying Slack requires Slack to be interested in selling themselves. npizzolato 11 years ago You're misinterpreting him. "Buy" here is purchasing the product, as a typical customer.
npizzolato 11 years ago You're misinterpreting him. "Buy" here is purchasing the product, as a typical customer.
cjbprime 11 years ago You're assuming:* that Slack was for sale too* that Dropbox wanted the app, rather than the people who made the app
jfb 11 years ago Slack is out for a lot of groups that don't particularly want internal, private communications routed through a third-party.
fletchowns 11 years ago I don't understand why you are being downvoted for legitimate questions. npizzolato 11 years ago Same. It's kind of sad. Apparently questioning the business reason behind decisions isn't appreciated. I personally find them interesting.
npizzolato 11 years ago Same. It's kind of sad. Apparently questioning the business reason behind decisions isn't appreciated. I personally find them interesting.
BradRuderman 11 years ago I mean the slack product! rrdharan 11 years ago BradRuderman you are conflating two different things that are not necessarily related:(1) How Dropbox chooses to satisfy internal requirements/demand for a group chat solution(2) Why/whether Dropbox should have acquired/acqhired the Zulip team 1 reply →
rrdharan 11 years ago BradRuderman you are conflating two different things that are not necessarily related:(1) How Dropbox chooses to satisfy internal requirements/demand for a group chat solution(2) Why/whether Dropbox should have acquired/acqhired the Zulip team 1 reply →
Right by why maintain the chat app? Why not just buy slack.
Buying Slack requires Slack to be interested in selling themselves.
You're misinterpreting him. "Buy" here is purchasing the product, as a typical customer.
You're assuming:
* that Slack was for sale too
* that Dropbox wanted the app, rather than the people who made the app
Slack is out for a lot of groups that don't particularly want internal, private communications routed through a third-party.
GOTO 10
I don't understand why you are being downvoted for legitimate questions.
Same. It's kind of sad. Apparently questioning the business reason behind decisions isn't appreciated. I personally find them interesting.
I mean the slack product!
BradRuderman you are conflating two different things that are not necessarily related:
(1) How Dropbox chooses to satisfy internal requirements/demand for a group chat solution
(2) Why/whether Dropbox should have acquired/acqhired the Zulip team
1 reply →