Not sure how I feel about the product itself. Giving "karma" to your coworkers and having a leaderboard feels a bit Black Mirror Nosedive-esque <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosedive_(Black_Mirror)" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosedive_(Black_Mirror)</a><p>Are these kinds of things actually good for corporate culture?
The interactive tour on our website at <a href="https://karmabot.chat/#demo" rel="nofollow">https://karmabot.chat/#demo</a> (desktop only) is pretty cool. It looks good and can do a lot:<p>- It executes bot's commands<p>- Emulates Slack interface with channels, conversations and all<p>- Generates dummy data on the spot<p>- Supports multiple languages<p>Sharing a semi-long read with some code bits. Please feel free to ask any questions. Thanks!<p>P.S.: Got Mictrosoft Teams demo too: <a href="http://karmabot.chat/ms/#demo" rel="nofollow">http://karmabot.chat/ms/#demo</a>
Slack is distracting enough as it is without having to send and reply to karma requests like this. Would negatively effect my view of a workplace employing a bot like this
Whoa, always very cool to see a fellow Aucklander here on HN :)<p>Hmm, I'm curious to know if you would consider something like Officevibe to be a competitor for example?<p>From what I understand, their Slack integration can't be configured on a team by team level for example so it's mostly used via email where I work. As a result, it's really easy to just overlook all of those requests for feedback and so on as they blend in with the rest of my inbox<p>I presume it wouldn't quite be as Officevibe is more for anonymous (opt out) feedback while Karmabot is focused on visible feedback it seems.
That's cool, I did the same a few years ago and got an email from Slack asking to put this green banner at the bottom saying it's not affiliated with Slack.<p><a href="https://wakatime.com/slack" rel="nofollow">https://wakatime.com/slack</a>