Roadmap
Current app version: 0.13.0
Addresso is proudly local-first / self-custodial, just the way things should be in web3. But this does mean you have to set up sync. 👉🏼 SET UP SYNC NOW 👈🏼
You’ll find an outline of our current roadmap below.
Please don’t be shy letting us know what you think. 🙏🏼
As our technology webpage points out, we take a humanity-centered design approach that by definition demands designing with the community rather than for them. And of course that’s also just plain sensible!
Some ideas are simply tactical and immediate. Others may have long-term systemic implications, by which we mean the whole web3 system. As we’ve had the privilege of giving Addresso and the broader contexts some deep thought over the years, we’re pretty fluent in the systemic side of things. This means we’ll shy away from ideas that may have immediate value for you when we reason that it will be to your (and everyone’s) disadvantage in the longer-term. We will find a different way forward together.
If we cannot prioritise something you consider a priority, please know that we’re always trying to balance things and do our best. We may have a deeply talented technology team but it’s a small team. Thanks for your patience.
The Addresso roadmap as of right now
Addresso Roadmap
| Idea | Description |
|---|---|
| Add NS names beyond ENS | Add more name services (e.g. SNS, ArNS) with a careful eye on the dynamic nature of forward and reverse resolution, i.e. if and when such things change, it should be made visible. |
| Addresso log | View the Addresso Book’s change log, i.e. all additions, edits, deletions. |
| App settings | One place to configure things. |
| Browser plugins | Automatically detect ledger addresses for easy addition. Translate ledger addresses into names in-browser. Insert names into fields. |
| Collaborative Addresso Books | Maintain an Addresso Book with others. |
| Favorite | Does what favoriting does. |
| Import | Import existing lists the signatory may have maintained previously, and pulling in information from other sources too. |
| Look and feel | Elevating the UI to equal the engineering under the hood. |
| Me & My Wallets | Add Me & My Wallets section to the app allowing multiple wallets to be privileged to maintain an Addresso Book (referred to as signatory wallets). |
| More chains | Adding addresses from more and more chains. |
| Multi-lingual | Make the app available in many different languages. |
| Native apps | For Mac OS, iOS, Windows, Android, Linux. |
| Packs | Easily add packs of addresses, curated and signed by third parties. |
| Permanently delete an entry | Don’t just remove it from the Addresso Book, but nuke it from the database too (i.e. from the records integral to Addresso’s automated change recording and replication capability). |
| Profile pics | Automatic import and manual upload. |
| Read the address out loud | Always preferable to glancing repeatedly between two screens. |
| Recently deleted | A 30-day trash bin from which entries can be undeleted. |
| Remote peer | The facility to run a peer remotely for high-availability syncing. Run it anywhere. |
| Search by signatory wallet | Find those entries that have been added and / or edited by a specific signatory wallet. |
| Share | Share an entry securely with anyone via a link. |
| Signatory wallet roles | Signatory wallets (i.e. privileged to maintain an Addresso Book) can be set as admin, contributor (read-write), and reader (read-only). |
| Software Development Kit | Wallet and app development teams can help their customers feel right at home by integrating their customers' Addresso Books quickly and easily. |
| Tagging | Does what tagging does! |
| View transaction history | View contextually relevant transaction information. |