Google Wave. I’ve heard people talking about it for a while now. Some have gotten invitations. I have not. For this week’s gnovis Round Up, I’ve compiled some info on what Google Wave is and what it can do. Now that it has been up and running for a few weeks, look over the reactions and suggested uses from around the blogosphere. Check it out. Let us know if you use it and why (Jason T: now we all know not to expect an invite from you any time soon ;) ).
If you have one, shoot me over an invitation and I’ll check it out myself.

Don’t know what Google Wave is? Neither did I. Luckily the site whatisgooglewave.com has all the answers:
[Google Wave] is a web application and computing platform designed to bring together e-mail, instant messaging, wiki, and social networking, with a strong collaborative focus, mixed with spellchecker and translator extensions, which are able to work in concert, in real-time.
Still not getting a clear picture? Check out this very cute video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDu2A3WzQpo&feature=player_embedded
Zach Wittaker on ZDnet.com writes:
But maybe the long of the short of it is that it just doesn’t even feel slightly ready yet. There’s no particular way to get started, no easy way to begin, and I was immensely confused when features which weren’t available yet opened up a draft wave to explain it… [It] is too tricky and fiddly to get working with comfortably.
Chris Crum on WebProNews is generally positive but skeptical of the hype:
It seems cool and potentially useful. Worst case scenario, it is just another tool that you can use if you want, which may or may not make your life (and work) easier. Best case (for Google at least), it becomes like email (or to a lesser extent Facebook) in the sense that it is practically unavoidable to use because everyone you know uses it and if you don't you will be out of the loop. At this point, I'm just leaning toward the former.
On Neowin.net, Max Majewski sees faults but looks forward to future benefits:
Google Wave won't make the world a better place, or even reverse the damages we've done to nature. It can help inspire such thinking, though; since it makes spreading news and ideas easer yet…. As soon as people realize in what ways using a wave could render even the most obscure project crystal-clear, Google Wave is the refulgent victor.
Zombie Journalism explains 4 potential uses for Google Wave specifically for journalists:
1. It’s a newsroom budgeting solution
2. It’s a reporting collaboration tool
3. It’s a community conversation tool
4. It’s a public Wiki or crowdsourced story
Richard MacManus on ReadWriteWeb offers a few uses for Google Wave in the University:
Overall, it is clear that Google Wave has potential to be very useful in the education system, particularly as a real-time collaborative note-taking tool. Three students experimented with just that in a lecture; the resulting notes were said to be "more complete" than if Wave hadn't been used.
After sending out 9 invitations, the Electric Educator published the responses from several educators. This is just one example. Check out the rest:
One of the advantages of Google wave will be "Globalization". This way people from different cultures who speak different languages, can communicate with each other. Thus, bringing them closer to one another, another step in the direction of making this world a real "village".
- trish's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Printer-friendly version
- Send to friend









- All Content
- Podcast

Too soon.
- can't do private waves (so there is no way of preventing one of the people in your wave from adding someone you may not have wanted in it in the first place)
and to make matters worse
- can't remove people from waves (so that annoying person that was just added without your consent...s/he is here to stay)
- can't send notifications when you have a new wave so you have to keep checking back
and to make matters worse
- can't separate new waves from all waves while still showing that you have unread ones which you then have to dig through all of the waves to find
- can't integrate with gmail
- can't export waves in accessible formats like PDFs and Word
- can't undo
- can't empty trash
I'll stop there, but the list goes on.
This is problematic for me not because Google released a product with some bugs, but that they released a half-baked product and placed the responsibility on "identifying" the issues on the users. But all of these are pretty obvious and Google should have been able to figure them out on their own before release. Is the Product Ideas for Wave (http://productideas.appspot.com/#15/e=224f1&t=224f2&o=10&v=26) their way of building a community around the product? Or are they making us point out the obvious so they can later be heroes when they enhance? Either way, I say: too soon.
What part of 'Google Wave
What part of 'Google Wave Preview' did you not get? This is a Beta test, without all the functionality that they eventually plan on having. Of course its going to seem 'half baked' - this is an open beta, a stress test on their servers, a way for thousands upon thousands of people to find all the bugs and desirable things in and for wave that the developers may have missed.
If all this functionality that it can't do yet was in it already, this wouldn't be a preview. Its a failing of today's culture that we want it all, perfect, right now, and are not willing to accept test runs. So relax, take a moment to step back and realize... its still in testing. Gmail wasn't perfect when it was first launched, and now we have Wave... which, if Google's past efforts are any sort of yardstick, will be quite the product once it is fully released.