Google Wave

I just took a look at the Google I/​O video that unveils the devel­op­ment pre­view for Google Wave: Google’s newest endeavor to cre­ate the next gen­er­a­tion of col­lab­o­ra­tive work and communication.

Google brings up a good point: email has been around for 40 years, which is older than the World Wide Web!  There­fore they posed the ques­tion: ‘What would email look like if it were invented today?’

Enough intro­duc­tion, let’s get to the good stuff!  Waves start out as a shared doc­u­ment: when you cre­ate a wave, you put some ini­tial infor­ma­tion (text, pic­tures, and attach­ments, etc.) on it and invite peo­ple to view it.  You can invite as many peo­ple as you want, and it will show up in each person’s inbox.  Peo­ple can then add pubic com­ments or replies, send direct mes­sages to cer­tain users, make changes to the orig­i­nal text, and “instant mes­sage” with other users in real time (online users can see other peo­ple typ­ing on a character-​​by-​​character basis).  In this sense, a wave becomes more than a shared doc­u­ment: it can take on the role of an email, a blog post, a chat room, an instant sys­tem, and a photo/​file gallery.

A user can choose to make a wave pub­lic by post­ing it to Blog­ger or embed­ding it on a web­site.  Embed­ded waves have all of the same fea­tures that they would if they were on the Google Wave site: users can see real-​​time updates and all edits are imme­di­ately syn­chro­nized with all places where the wave might be located.

Google Wave is cur­rently avail­able to invited users only.  One may request an invite on the Google Wave home­page, but don’t expect any imme­di­ate reply.  Wave is sup­posed to go pub­lic by the end of the year, and I look for­ward to using it!

No Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email is never shared.Required fields are marked *