As useful as it once was, email has become a hodgepodge of unorganized conversations. Add to that other tools—Twitter, Google Hangouts—that crowd our screens. Slack, an app that’s conquering cubicles worldwide, stacks nearly all of your communications in one place. You can share files, direct-message, and search a project’s entire history. So where is all of this communication headed? We asked Slack’s co-founder, Stewart Butterfield.
Popular Science: Is email on its deathbed?
Stewart Butterfield: Email isn’t going anywhere, but it’s the lowest common denominator of communication. For one, every message is treated equally: family, work, friends, bank statements, and newsletters. They’re hard to sort through. You also have this very tiny window into a conversation. With Slack, you can view a whole conversation thread—even before you joined it. That means…
