OK, I spent 30 minutes with it. I didn't sign up, but only because I have no particular need to publish right now. It might be a good thing to have a freebie thing that only lets you do, say, 5 pages; but I appreciate that there's a risk some people will abuse that to suck down the results and re-upload them elsewhere. Maybe a 'try it for 30 days free' option?<p>I would change up the front page a bit. Currently, the 4th element (the subheading in the caption to the picture under the headline) is what tells me I can edit-in-place. The animation is great, but I opened the page in another tab and then clicked over to it a moment later, by which time the animation had completeed. I didn't see what the big deal was until I read that. Instead, I'd make that the headline: <i>This is your editor</i>. Because the immediate editability is the big win. I <i>loved</i> the UX and how responsive it was.<p>Minor caveats: some of the fonts don't render right in Chrome, but have the bottom of the letters (descenders etc.) chopped off. I'd really like some toolbar widget to turn on a grid for those times when I want to line things up or maintain a vertical symmetry.<p>Last issue, the <i>Learn More</i> page. Visually and semantically, it's great - it makes a compelling argument and does so in a humorous fashion. But you don't tell me anything about what I'm publishing - is this flash? HTML+CSS? Something else? That information should be there so I understand whether I'm buying into your hosting walled garden, or renting a general-purpose tool that I can then deploy and further develop as I see fit.<p>I also think you should put the $ cost up on the <i>Learn More</i> page and offer a link or argument for the price. I hate hate hate not seeing the price information until I get to the sign up screen, it always feels like a gyp. Wear your price on your sleeve; that establishes that your product has value from the outset, and doesn't confront me with an expensive surprise when I try to sign up. Invite me to put my hand in my wallet <i>before</i> signing up, otherwise I feel like there's a little bait-and-switch going on.<p>Don't take these criticisms as bitter medicine - I think this is a fabulous offering, and that's why I've critiqued it in such detail.