I get where you're coming from but the guy above was straight up declaring Trello's death. Even with skepticism you can agree it's being too pessimistic too early.
And if it goes down a different path, there will be a hole in the market waiting for the next Trello and that's good too.
> there will be a hole in the market waiting for the next Trello and that's good too
Good for someone willing to take advantage of the market opportunity, maybe. But is it good for users that have to deal with their company churning from one enterprise to-do list to another?
Familiarity (or lack thereof) with software like Trello can be the difference between enjoying your day to day and finding it endlessly frustrating.
We have a few of these here in Brazil (i.e. http://www.99taxis.com/). The apps work just fine, it's the taxis that lack quality in their service. Cars are usually beaten down, dirty. Drivers are impolite, almost never use Waze or some other GPS app and the fare at night rivals Uber's.
There has been some drama regarding Uber v. Taxi around here as well (São Paulo, Brazil). One thing I know for sure is that as long as Uber's around I'll never call a taxi again.
The benchmark section in the README clearly shows the echo router to be the only one of all benchmarked routers that has exactly 0 allocations per request.
The article isn't clear on the encryption methods used on the data transferred between the voting machine and the system that actually account votes. But it seems to me that Brazil's government is being anything but incompetent in the data security subject.
Can't wait to read the book that'll come out of the seminar.