Scrybe - It’s Cool But Who’s Going to Use It?
Saturday, December 1st, 2007I just finished my first thorough usage of Scrybe, which is a new approach to online calendar tools.
It’s interesting. Strange… but interesting.
If you haven’t already seen it already, I recommend starting with this introductory video they put on YouTube. If you’re like me, it will pique your interest, and then raise some questions. I’ll try to answer some of those questions.
[youtube 1u3ekzwnYxw The Scrybe demo video]
What kind of technology is that? AJAX?
About 70% of my initial fascination with Scrybe came from my hope that it was built with AJAX, or some other basically-open technology. But in reality, it’s just Flash. Yes, it’s one big Flash application. And, honestly, that bores me a little bit. To be fair, it’s an extremely well designed and coded Flash application. It feels good to use — smooth animations, short loading times, modern UI conventions. It’s also database-driven, so I’m not quite so worried about my data being locked up inside a proprietary application. But it also has all the limitations that come with a Flash website.
Will it import my existing calendar?
Scrybe imports from two formats: iCalendar and CSV. The good news is that iCalendar covers almost all your bases. If you use Outlook, Google Calendar, Groupwise, or Apple’s iCal, then you’re in luck. All of those, and many others, can export to iCalendar format. For my test, I imported my Google Calendar which has next to nothing on it. All my events came through just fine, but I wasn’t able to test meeting invitations.
The interface looks great on that demo. Is it really that good?
Demos never tell the whole story. In a video, the demo guy always knows right where to click and most features are already set up to make a good show. My experience, however, was still pretty good. Their UI claim to fame is this “keeping things in context” approach. So when you move from the year view to the month view, the UI zooms in to that month. And when you click a day, that day expands within the month view. And when you click on an hour within a day, you zoom in to the details of that day. It’s nice eye candy, but I’m not sure how much benefit it adds. I use Outlook all the time at work, and I never really felt a loss of context. Sure, Outlook doesn’t zoom and pan like Scrybe does, but it’s still pretty clear what’s going on. I consider this more of an eye candy effect than a useful UI change. But it may help some people to understand their calendars better.
There’s also a few scattered artifacts of bad or incomplete design in their UI. Take a look at this screen shot:
What do you suppose that little carrot in the bottom right corner does? Any guesses? No?
Clicking it reveals a drop-down list of miscellaneous extra functionality. Probably a bunch of features they decided they want, but didn’t know where to put.
Honestly, the calendar UI is quite good and innovative — a tough combination to achieve. The ThoughtPad feature, on the other hand, was not as impressive. More on that later.
How does the Offline Access feature work?
I’m not totally sure. My guess that Scrybe keeps a copy of your data on a server somewhere, and then regularly converts the database content into CSV format (or something similar), and then saves that in your browser cache. Maybe it puts all your calendar data into a cookie. I could do some tests to find out if anyone is really curious. At any rate, the feature works exactly as advertised, and it’s pretty cool. Well, except for in Safari. I couldn’t find a “Work Offline” function in Safari, so when I tried to log in without a connection, it just tried endlessly to access their server.
Thought Pad looks awesome in the demo. What’s your problem with it?
Scrybe treats the Thought Pad almost like an entirely different application, which is probably good. But the Thought Pad UI is very strange. When you click into the Thought Pad tool, you’re presented with a sort of inline tutorial, with arrows pointing to the various parts of the UI and explaining what they are. All UI designers know that kind of thing is almost always a tacit recognition that the design doesn’t make sense. In this case, it’s definitely true.
The inline tutorial helped me add a neat little link (they call it the “Scrybe Bookmarklet”) that, supposedly, lets you paste web content into your Thought Pad. You’re supposed to add this link to the bookmarks bar in your browser. When you select some text in a web page, you then click on the “bookmarklet”, and somehow the content gets into your Thought Pad. Sounds pretty neat, but it definitely didn’t work for me. I tried it in Safari and Firefox, and it didn’t work in either. Probably a known bug in the beta.
In my attempts to use the Thought Pad, I wasn’t able to create anything as rich and pretty looking at the Thought Pad in the demo. When you edit a note in the Thought Pad, you have some basic text editing tools, and some tools for inserting links, pictures, and videos. Only the text editing tools worked when I tried it.
The Thought Pad uses a unique paradigm for creating and categorizing the notes you create. I really didn’t like it or understand it at first, but I finally figured it out. It makes sense, but I just have to ask “why?”. What does this gain over a traditional create/categorize approach? It seems like a steep learning curve for no particular reason.
I wish I used Google Notebook to know how it compares.
How do the printed calendars look?
I printed my calendar in a couple of the formats available. The feature works as advertised, and it’s exactly as cool as having a printout of your calendar sounds like it would be. Of course, those people who would rather sync their calendar to their PDA will be grossly unsatisfied.
Any final thoughts?
It’s neat, but I don’t foresee it becoming broadly popular. Maybe that’s because, as a limited beta, it’s missing all the social networking features it needs. Why can’t I share my calendar with my wife? Why can’t I publish my calendar on my web site?
It’s also missing some critical functions to compete with Outlook in the business user market. I don’t know of any way for a Flash application to sync with a PDA, but then again I don’t know too much about Adobe Flex or Adobe Air or the other new advances coming soon.
But for right now, here’s the market for regular Scrybe users: very web-savvy, probably young, interested in keeping a calendar, and no PDA or iPod that they want to keep their calendar on. My gut says that’s a small market. But for those of you who are in it, be sure to check out Scrybe!


