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Google Wave is not Email - its so much more.

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14 points by Spyckie 17 years ago · 13 comments

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vidarh 17 years ago

The "see you typing" thing disappeared to a large extent from IM clients because it was horrible. Users don't like other people seeing their "thoughts" and it creates a much stronger pressure to formulate/complete an immediate answer.

And the "robot" thing is just inane - it's not like bots are hard to interface with e-mail or with the web; it's just that at the current level few bots are very interesting beyond the very basic (IRC type) bots that keep track of when people last were around etc.

Wave looks interesting, but because it provides distributed/federated group chat / document editing / collaboration more than it competes with e-mail.

I'd be much more inclined to see it as an alternative to (some) wiki's and project collaboration tools like Basecamp than to e-mail.

  • SpyckieOP 17 years ago

    "Seeing you type" is the same thing as talking - only introverts don't like other people seeing their thoughts, while extroverts prefer it. The thing is, extroverts comprise the majority of the population. Also, while seeing you type may not be preferred in conversation, it will be preferred in a document collaboration environment.

    The robot thing is not inane because it is part of the distributed/federated document editing, and it has media elements attached to it rather than just text. In IRC, you only talk to people for the most part, so bots in IRC are centered around facilitating that purpose. With Wave, you talk, work, and plan with data that can take any form - a much broader scope that allows robots to do much more than just 'user logged in, user logged out'.

    The reason why I think it is a strong alternative to project collaboration tools is because of 'see as you type' and its robot capabilities. Yes, it has a nice document model, but that isn't the key feature for me.

  • stcredzero 17 years ago

    Wave looks interesting, but because it provides distributed/federated group chat / document editing / collaboration more than it competes with e-mail.

    But isn't this precisely where computer use is trending? The whole Web 2.0 thing in retrospect was as mass of more mainstream users discovering that interacting with and getting to know others resulted in many cool things. It's been trending that way since we had 300 baud modems dialing in to BBS. Add to that, the discovery that interaction is a lot more fun when it's about something, like pictures, journal writing, software, news...

    But we are still at the infancy stages when it comes to collaboration. Things like the "Minority Report" style multi-touch interfaces, Microsoft Table, and Reactable are the direction we should go. We need interfaces that aren't designed for one person to focus all of their input on one machine. We need interfaces that let us focus our attention on communally manipulated digital media and each other with equal ease.

swombat 17 years ago

I'm getting tired of the whole "OMG this new thing is going to blow your mind away" quickly followed by "Sorry, it's not available yet" gig.

2009: the year of hypeware.

adamhowell 17 years ago

If I had a dollar for every "serious game changer on the web today..."

  • zimbabwe 17 years ago

    Then you'd probably have a good $8.

    We're in a tech renaissance. Lots of cool stuff is coming out, and they're all doing things in really different ways. It makes perfect sense that the game is constantly changing. It's exciting!

    • omouse 17 years ago

      The cool stuff is stuck on a limited and half-baked platform...

      • zimbabwe 17 years ago

        That's silly. There's cool stuff on pretty much every platform. Gaming, Unix apps, online apps, iPhone apps...

weegee 17 years ago

I hate online chat. Hate it hate it hate it. Sitting there waiting for someone to type back at you, it's totally stupid. I'll never use this Google Wave. Email is good enough for me. And nothing can replace a good old phone call.

  • zokiboy 17 years ago

    you could watch the demo. it's not chat. you can go for a walk and come back and read everything. the power of it is that it can be integrated with everything so you can also get replies for this comment on wave and also reply to it on wave. someone will implement phone in it too (ie skype). think of it as one place for all your communication ;)

growt 17 years ago

This is how it came to be:

Inside the Google Headquarters:

Marketing/Finance Guy: Hey we need "live" search, its hot right now!

Tech Guy: Go buy twitter!

MG: Are you crazy we're in a recession, we don't have the money.

TG: Ok I have this old new-way-of-doing-email sideproject, that was kind of "live".

MG: Great, can you make it even more "live"?

TG: (sarcastic)Well the users could see each other typing.

MG: (exited) Great! Make it so!

TG: (concerned) That would kill our server if we ever released it.

MG: Don't worry we wont release it, just prepare a demo.

TG: And if we eventually release it?

MG: We make it Open Source, so somebody else will run it and their servers will crash.

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