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Comparison · Comms

Matrix vs Elastic Email

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

M
Matrix
COMMS
5.0

Matrix grinds toward 2.0: sliding sync lands in spec, v1.19 ships long-pending features.

◆ Current state

The tracked feed is Matrix's weekly This Week in Matrix digest plus occasional spec releases, so the signal is protocol-and-ecosystem movement rather than a single product's changelog. The substantive news this stretch: Matrix v1.19 landed encrypted room-history sharing and custom emoji (both multi-year MSCs), and Simplified Sliding Sync — a core Matrix 2.0 pillar — was accepted into the spec. Server forks (Tuwunel, Zendrite/Dendrite) are maturing with Conduit migration paths and Synapse-API compatibility.

◆ Where it's heading

Matrix 2.0 is the organizing arc: sliding sync moving from accepted MSC into a spec release, MatrixRTC multi-SFU calling, and now a Presence v2 effort to fix long-standing federation load. P2P Matrix has restarted with new funding. The protocol is executing on quarterly spec cadence while the client and server ecosystem catches up to the 2.0 primitives.

◆ Prediction

The next spec release should start folding sliding-sync extension MSCs (especially the E2EE ones) in behind the accepted core, and expect continued Presence v2 proposals (batching, sliding-sync integration) to follow the initial Selective Presence MSC.

E5.0

Elastic Email's public feed is content marketing aimed at AI-app builders and small agencies.

◆ Current state

The visible feed is almost entirely blog and marketing content — how-tos, listicles, and integration explainers — rather than a product changelog. The through-line is positioning Elastic Email as the email layer for AI-app builders (v0, Bolt, Replit) and small agencies, alongside a CRM sync integration with Pipedrive.

◆ Where it's heading

With only marketing posts to go on, product direction is hard to read from this feed; the editorial emphasis on AI-app platforms and agency scaling shows where Elastic Email wants to win, not what it is shipping. Treat the cadence here as publishing rhythm, not release velocity.

◆ Prediction

These entries don't support a confident product prediction — they are content marketing, so expect more platform-targeted how-tos rather than a clear feature roadmap. A changelog or release feed would be needed to judge actual product movement.

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