I tried it, the idea might be good for short chats and fast-moving discussions, since it avoids interrupting other people mid-thought. I feel it is only for very specific use cases.
Much more light-weight UI, no need for accounts, connection with the markdown editor underneath. More details about the product itself are here: https://kraa.io/about
I love the technolgy, but adoption is going to be too blank canvas for most people. There's no good queues, organization, work flow, etc; no extant content to get into the flow, etc.
What you want to do is the same reddit did: sock puppets; but ethically sourced. Write a LLM routine that looks at a neutral source and starts using your product.
People generally dont know what to do when they can do anything.
Also, once you get active users, your get active trolls, so you'll need some kind of active or passive denial system. I think the most successful system is a lifetime $ subscription cost and a thorough banning of trolls. Either you make a lot of money on troll costs or you end up with a nice harmony.
Real-real time meaning other people see your message as you type it? This is a feature that would actually discourage me from using the chat. Having to control how your message looks while you're typing it is added stress for the writer and doesn't really give anything of value to the reader. Not sure why this is better than "traditional" chats.
That reminds me of split-screen BBS chats. Every keypress is sent immediately to the peer and echoed on your own screen as well. It was quite fun, kind of a collaborative editing session more so than just chatting.
That's fair and something I know will is a love/hate kind of thing. I think if you truly experience a conversation in this format, your opinion on the 'sensibility' of this approach would hopefully change, even if it's still something that's not for you.
That being said, we will have a feature soon where you can compose the entire message before sending it (the 'traditional' way).
What you want to do is the same reddit did: sock puppets; but ethically sourced. Write a LLM routine that looks at a neutral source and starts using your product.
People generally dont know what to do when they can do anything.
Also, once you get active users, your get active trolls, so you'll need some kind of active or passive denial system. I think the most successful system is a lifetime $ subscription cost and a thorough banning of trolls. Either you make a lot of money on troll costs or you end up with a nice harmony.
That being said, we will have a feature soon where you can compose the entire message before sending it (the 'traditional' way).