I’m excited to announce that Brightyard is almost ready to enter its beta phase and I’m looking for individuals/teams who would like to get early access and test it out.
Those who use Microsoft/Outlook for email will be given first priority. The gmail integration is still in development.
Check out the landing page here to sign up for early access.
What is Brightyard you say?
It’s a place for managing your day-to-day work and collaboration. Teams and individuals can organize, manage, and share their work more effectively, leading to a more productive workday and increased collaboration.
It combines email management, task management, and customer management into one platform and allows you to easily create relationships between them – giving you a 360-degree view into your work and customers.
I hope you find it useful and look forward to your feedback.
Great question @jaos.pcl. Allowed storage, and whether a user is able to upload more files, is based on the User’s total file size being less than the allowed amount of storage (e.g. 500 MB) for a user/plan. Every time a file is uploaded we run a calculation to see if the size of the file + files already uploaded is less than the allowed amount for the plan. To get the size of files uploaded we perform a search for all files related to that user and calculate the size.
You’re welcome. Bubble is quite flexible and able to accomplish most use cases. Sometimes it just takes a little time to figure out how to configure them.
This looks really sleek! Watch out for the width of your logo/name in responsive behavior, Brightyard gets split into “Brighty” and “ard” when you condense the page. Same for your “$5” and “$10” groups.
Awesome! Today I was talking about this lack of Gmail, and why in the world they are crazy (or arrogant / to rich? see closing of Google+…my god…) to remove the Google Contacts away from Gmail, so any user has to switch to another “google-product” to retrieve his contacts. I think you really do what Google cant do with your app, to have a suite to manage all the necessary things in one place. People like Paul Buchheit who created Gmail are missing since years there, so a very good chance - I think I will come back to you later to be a customer!