@a12rj We have plans to go international ASAP. However, in the beginning we needed to keep things as simple as possible to make a stable product so we limited things to the US.
@davidiwanow@a12rj It is more expensive to do texts abroad, however, that isn't the reason we haven't done that yet. It's more to do with creating more variables that can go wrong, when we just wanted to nail the 1st iteration of the product.
@davidiwanow@a12rj We're not ignoring the majority of the market. We laid out plans from the beginning and when you are a small startup you can't do everything. We'll have the android out in June.
@livejamie one advantage that I see is that the reminder is sent to the recipient as a text message. People look at their text messages far more than looking at messages in an app. It's also very simple to set the reminder. You just add the recipient you want to remind, write the message you want them to see, and then set the reminder.
@livejamie The reason there is no major player in the to-do list app space is because it is niche market that appeals to a certain kind of individual . Even Wunderlist (a company you bought) is in this mix albeit maybe the most successful. One of the issues in Silicon Valley is we make things way too complicated for the average person to use. We tend to not realize how easy we can use products because we are engineers and all of those products have that exact problem. The average person cannot figure out how to use them because it is too complex or too dense to navigate. Badger is designed for the average person to hit a few buttons, write a little text and setup reminders to other people. Nothing less, nothing more. All those products you mention have different core purposes than what we are doing. Calendars are primarily for events and you can use it to remind yourself. To do lists like Wunderlist are exactly for to do lists to check off and it does that well. Badger is purely for reminding you to do things. e.g. "take out the trash" weekly or "pay the rent" monthly.
@livejamie the barriers to entry are much higher with those specific products to remind people to do things. I'm sure you can "hack" the products to do it, but it isn't easy thus most people not using those products for that. Like I said earlier, technically savvy people like yourself find Wunderlist useful and easy to use, but the average person does not.
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