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EtherPad out of private beta

91 points| anuraggoel | 17 years ago |etherpad.com | reply

35 comments

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[+] ruddzw|17 years ago|reply
I had the chance to use EtherPad as part of a job interview while it was in private beta. It was supposed to use Skype and EtherPad to get the full effect. Skype broke, but EtherPad worked great. The ease of getting code to the interviewer, and (I imagine) the ability to see the way I wrote the code were really helpful.

If you're doing a phone screen interview in the future, I highly recommend using EtherPad.

[+] terpua|17 years ago|reply
Wow, great use case. I wonder if EtherPad can focus on such a niche and charge for it (with other relevant features).
[+] pclark|17 years ago|reply
Nifty. Pity there aren't more syntax options (just JS)

Here's a test URL to toy with: http://etherpad.com/qtUr4Iw3mr

[+] exfswlkrji|17 years ago|reply
It just sits there saying "connecting..." So does that mean no other user online, or my Javascript is broken, or my net connections is down, or they are slashdotted, or what?
[+] lionhearted|17 years ago|reply
Very cool - thanks for making it easy for the rest of us to try :)

I've used Google docs to do collaborative work with people and it's served me pretty well, but Etherpad seems like a solid option.

[+] cosmo7|17 years ago|reply
Ow! My eyes!

Seriously, hire a designer to smooth out your site, it's well worth it.

[+] pchivers|17 years ago|reply
Ow! My eyes!

Please design a new favicon. The current one looks like an ode to mid-nineties shareware sites.

[+] initself|17 years ago|reply
The volume on the screencast is way too low.
[+] axod|17 years ago|reply
It'd be interesting to know what changed from last time, if I remember right it was something to do with database overload?

Don't mean to pry, but it'd be cool to know what the original issue was...

[+] flatline|17 years ago|reply
Looks pretty neat. I'm still trying to find the Emacs keybinding option...More seriously, some basic formatting options may be nice, for actual document production vs., as some others mentioned, a fancy chat system.

My first thought was that a version control repository and editing system could be built on top of this that would actually allow two people to see each others' edits simultaneously but compile only their own revisions until a commit occurred.

[+] CalmQuiet|17 years ago|reply
It seems to response quite quickly at this point - as quickly as the demo shows in the etherpad.com demo video. Those of you who tried pclark's test/toy link: try signing up and selecting a color for your editing. Pretty slick!

I'm wondering what their business model is? No ads yet. Will this just showcase their hacking abilities?

[+] exfswlkrji|17 years ago|reply
Corporate versions with security and active directory authentication. Rich text, images, spreadsheets in a paid-for version. Branded versions to include in your own site.

Since it generally requires at least two people who need to communicate then at least one of them is likely to be prepared to pay.It's not just an eyeballs=advert web2.0 thing.

[+] cellis|17 years ago|reply
Is this like chat reimagined or am i just crazy?
[+] pg|17 years ago|reply
When you want to test out Etherpad and don't already have text you want to edit, you tend to use it like chat. But even then you can do things you can't do with chat, because you can see what the other person is typing and start responding before they finish (like in a real conversation). I've suggested to the Appjets that they might want to make a variant of Etherpad aimed at chat.
[+] anuraggoel|17 years ago|reply
No and no. Chat is linear. EtherPad bends the space time continuum.
[+] nirmal|17 years ago|reply
Is EtherPad out of beta functionally equivalent to EtherPad in beta?
[+] mindaugas|17 years ago|reply
I can't believe it's Javascript !!!

Seriuosly - Excelent job!

[+] agnokapathetic|17 years ago|reply
Anyone know when AppJet with Comet support be released?
[+] misuba|17 years ago|reply
Strictly speaking, AppJet already supports Comet, but the full support that's used in EtherPad is part of the next major version of the AppJet platform. From the sound of the ITConversations interview linked above, the new platform won't be out until a bit after Enterprise EtherPad.
[+] Tichy|17 years ago|reply
The simplicity argument kills the discussion for me. It can't be right that to achieve columness, one has to wade through cascades of ever more esoteric articles explaining how to hack CSS.