Google Wave Out of Beta
googlePLEXS writes "Google Wave is open to all users at wave.google.com, as a Google Labs product — no invitation needed. Google Apps administrators will also have the option to add Wave as a Labs feature for their domains, helping groups of people communicate and work together more productively." If you haven't played with it, it's worth your time just to try to think beyond the bounds of IRC/Email. It's not going to change your work flow, but I still think it's worth a bit of your time to see it.
Dupe? http://tech.slashdot.org/story/10/05/19/1721203/Google-Wave-Now-Open-To-All
Dilbert RSS feed
It's actually not difficult to see what it can be used with. Basically, anything you type can be a wave. Any content you create can be a wave. The problem is people see Google Wave as the product.
No, most people see it as a solution in search of a problem.
Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
I can already send any data through email, so what exactly makes Wave worth my time?
Real-time collaboration.
Wave isn't intended to have you compose a message and send it off. And then somebody else reads the message later and replies to you. It isn't intended for a thread-like conversation.
The idea is to have multiple people contributing to a discussion more-or-less simultaneously.
Kind of like if you were to cross email with AIM, Microsoft Word, and WebEx.
"Work is the curse of the drinking classes." -Oscar Wilde
Not surprising, at least, Gmail has a scroll bar. I mean, a real scrollbar, which apparently they are not cool enought for Wave.
Here are some interesting case studies
I'm not sure if you were trolling or being serious (haven't had my morning caffeine infusion yet), but here's a real-world example of pigeon-net doing exactly what you describe:
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_6209735
Smell that? You smell that? Burning karma, son. Nothing in the world smells like that...
With wave, just click the "add another person" button, and they can see the entire conversation-- unless you want to keep certain parts private (which is easy to do)
With wave, the blog comments could be a wave, the forum threads each could be waves, and the slashdot comments be waves. You reply, and your inbox now reflects the subscriptions to each. You could reply from your inbox, while others reply from slashdot or the blog-- but its all one messaging system, which means that doing it mobile is now a lot easier as well (you just need a mobile wave client).
Point 3 is especially big. Its kind of hard to see the benefit until youve actually tinkered with it and seen what it can do. For example I created a blogspot account, set up a test blog, and embedded a wave with an embedded sudoku board, and added the "everyone" member. Within seconds, on my blog, i had about 3-4 people playing sudoku and leaving comments-- in real time and with no refresh. I could later check my wave inbox and see any changes that had been made.
THAT is a big leap forward IMO-- if we can have a better messaging system with unified contacts and a unified interface, thats huge. All of a sudden we dont rely on 30 different websites producing an interface suitable to a 5 inch screen; we can just look for a suitable mobile client.
Umm, Wave is a protocol, with Google Wave being the reference implementation. The protocol supports what they call "federation" -- If my Wave address is Schadrach@Schadwave.com (a third party Wave server) and yours is numbski@googlewave.com, we can create a wave with each other invited, and it will maintain it on both wave servers. However, if everyone that is part of a given Wave is one the same server, that Wave never leaves that server. It is also possible to set a Wave server to not federate or to restrict who it will federate with, allowing you to create an "in house only" Wave server or a "only federate with other branches" Wave server or whatever.
What you just said is analogous to "Your e-mail has a serious case of 'data lock'. Don't want it on the Hotmail servers? Tough luck."
There are already some projects developing 3rd party Wave servers that are moderately far along -- as in they work, can be connected to, and have the basic features in place.
Therefore, a downstream wave provider can verify that the wave provider is not spoofing wavelet operations. It should not be able to falsely claim that a wavelet operation originated from a user on another wave provider or that it was originated in a different context.(source)
Need I go on? Lets face it, SMTP was a decent protocol, and has lasted a long time, but its age is showing, and its really time to move past something so antiquated and problem-ridden (spam? spoofing? reply-all fun? lack of encryption-by-default?).
There may indeed be good criticisms of the protocol, but the majority of the posts here seem to boil down to "I dont understand it, therefore it must have no uses". Is it just because it was Google that released it that it must be evil?