Future Vision
What we're building towards
Introduction
Our mission is to help everybody make the right decision. But that doesn't just happen by having all of the right information. You also have to be able to use it.
Our vision for HASH is one of a truly all-in-one workspace, capable of not only importing information from all of a user's apps and services, and providing a unified view of it — but also allowing it to be interacted with directly from one place.
Planned Features
In addition to what you can currently do with HASH today, in the future you'll also be able to:
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set up automations, called flows, that perform actions (such as sending an email, or triggering a notification) in response to specific events, on a schedule, or when manually triggered→
create documents which can embed live data, as well as static/point-in-time information→
build tools, apps and other interfaces on top of the data in your web, with or without writing code→
run large-scale agent-based simulations, using realtime data, to identify optimization opportunities and risks in systems
Through these capabilities you'll not only be able to view information in one place, but also manage and update it, through business, industry, and problem-specific interfaces tailored around your needs. Whether you then continue to pay for separate subscription software services or progressively replace these with HASH is up to you, with two-way sync ensuring the ability to seamlessly transition in a risk-free way.
Pages will provide an alternative way of using your entities, in HASH. Pages exist within each web you belong to (i.e. your own personal web, or the shared web of any organizations you're a member of), and will appear in your left-hand sidebar inside of HASH.
Two types of pages are planned in HASH:
Blocks can be inserted into pages, and provide many different kinds of functionality. For example:
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a Paragraph block lets you type (or see) some text, depending on whether you have edit (or just view) permissions on a page→
an Image block similarly lets you edit, insert, or simply view a picture (depending again upon your permissions)→
an AI Image block lets you type in a prompt and actually generate an image, which is then saved and persisted on the page→
the Minesweeper block is just good fun (an embedded, inline mini-game)
These are all example blocks created using the Block Protocol which will be supported in HASH.
Blocks may be static — or allow interaction, such as in the case of a button or a dropdown, even offering access to complex functionality such as inline AI chatbots or other tools.
If you're a web developer comfortable writing code, or willing to use an AI agent to describe the kind of block you require, you can build and publish your own, using them inside of HASH, by following the instructions in our HASH developer docs.
Apps are ready-made bundles of blocks, types and pages, which can be added to a web with one click. Right now, we offer a pre-made range of apps for HASH, but in the future intend to support user-created apps, creatable in a "no-code" manner by combining the same elements.
We've already invested significant resources in each of these areas, and will be incorporating their functionality into HASH in the upcoming period. In some cases, we've already deployed versions of these technologies in the real-world, for example in our work to help optimize the initial rollout of COVID vaccines.
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