It’s definitely worth a shot if your meetings run long, and follow-up is weak
Hugo is a productivity service. Yes, another one. Maybe this one is different. Hugo aims to increase productivity by making coordination and synchronization between apps and the people who use them more seamless. At its core, Hugo syncs with a user’s calendar, so all prep, meeting notes, information, and follow-up can be traced back to a singular point. It also has live editing for multiple users. No more waiting for someone to send you the meeting notes or that guy’s number — it’s all there. Hugo integrates with other popular software like Asana, Slack, Zoom, and G Suite. It’s free for up to ten users and jumps to $6 a month per user for groups up to 25; after that you gotta make a sales call. It’s definitely worth a shot if your meetings run long, and follow-up is weak.
Facebook. It’s old news already, but whew, that was a doozy. First the whistleblower, then the six-hour shutdown of Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram, followed by the studies revealing the effects of Instagram on teens, Facebook took a beating. Mark Zuckerberg lost $7 billion in wealth in one day! It sounds like a lot, but remember that he was still worth $121 billion when the day ended.
Telegram gained 70 million new users when everything went down. Telegram feels a lot like WhatsApp but has ridiculous reactive emojis — beware of those.
Other winners that day were our collective attention. We’ve since lost it again and are not likely to find it soon.
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