X

Joyent offers workgroups a sort of new way to work

Rafe Needleman Former Editor at Large
Rafe Needleman reviews mobile apps and products for fun, and picks startups apart when he gets bored. He has evaluated thousands of new companies, most of which have since gone out of business.
Rafe Needleman
2 min read

A few days ago I got a demo of Joyent from the company's CTO, Jason Hoffman. His Web service is an email application, calendar, contact list, and file store for small groups. It's similar enough to Outlook and to existing online email applications that it's easy to grok, but it also has tweaks on the standard model that could make a difference for business customers.

It starts with Joyent's security defaults. The default privacy setting for everybody's email box is "wide open." Anybody in the team can peek into anybody else's mailbox. It's what Hoffman calls "cubicle security:" you trust your co-workers not to snoop on your desk, but if they need to do so they can, and they could save your bacon and the company's if you're on vacation and somebody needs that one piece of data that's on your desk. Users can lock their email boxes easily enough (Hoffman's own email box is locked from his employees), and also set access by person or by item.

The security defaults are whacked, if you ask me, but Joyent gets a big thumbs-up for its clever handling of email reply threads. On a group message, instead of replying to all and participating in an unruly thread of messages, you can reply via a comment field at the bottom of the message, and send a pointer to the original message -- now with a managed discussion thread appended to it -- back to the recipient or to the group of people who are cc'd on it. This is much cleaner than the standard way we handle email discussions.

Also clever: All items in Joyent -- messages, appointments, contacts, and files -- can be given tags, and users can subscribe to these tags on their Joyent desktop. This amounts to an extremely quick way to create project workspaces made up of email threads, files, and appointments.

The two big downsides of Joyent are that there's no offline version of it yet (although the Joyent server is standards-compliant; the email can be accessed by IMAP clients, for example) and that its cool tools don't easily extend to people outside your company's installation. Also, in my testing the application was a bit slow.

For a small company or a startup looking for a hosted email system, especially a company that doesn't want to buy in to the whole Microsoft Office/Exchange ecosystem, Joyent is worth serious consideration. It costs $15 to $100 a month, depending on the number of users.

For a deep and in-person look at Web 2.0 applications in the office, come to the Office 2.0 conference in San Francisco on October 11th and 12th. CNET is a sponsor, and I'll be speaking at the event.