Google Wave: Now What?

It’s been a couple of weeks now that I’ve had access to Google Wave, and sent out my invites. So, now what?Google_Wave_logo

Well, it’s still fairly quiet. A lot of the people I sent invites to have the “What the hell is this?” reaction. A lot of the conversations that are going on are of the “hey, I’m on Google Wave – Wow, so am I!” variety. To be honest, I sometimes felt like I was using a preview of a chat client – until I was on the This Week in Google 15 wave (open your Google Wave client and search for twig or twig15).

In this wave a discussion developed on the Novell Pulse product that was announced. After seeing it mentioned, I googled around for a bit and found a demo video. During the video, the collaborative editing was demonstrated, and I remarked that it was missing the little balloons that show up when someone types within Google Wave. One of the other participants asked me for the link to the demon, I posted it, and he proceeded to incorporate all that into my original message. That was a really powerful moment to see what collaborative editing can look like.

Apart from that, there hasn’t been a whole lot of collaboration going on. I made some notes during a presentation where two colleagues had Wave invites, but they never collaborated on the notes. I guess the whole form is still a little foreign to most people; if you have edited a Wiki entry, you may have an advantage, but otherwise, you really have to have a good use case.

The big step for Wave will probably be the Federation server. I can see several applications of publicizing a wave within our company, but I don’t want to make that wave public to the whole world. I’m hoping Federation will give us that capability.

Another improvement (without criticizing the Google wave client) would be different types of clients to the Wave protocol. Novell’s Pulse is/could be one, but I think it would be beneficial if multiple clients appear (look what happened to the web browsers when Internet Explorer got competition from Mozilla (Firefox), Apple (Safari) and Google (Chrome)).

The next couple of months will be interesting for Wave’s development. I think a lot of people forget that we’re still looking at a Preview (not a Beta!). Once the Wave splashes down on more people, it will be more stable and mature. Until then it’s a test environment, with only occasional glimpses of its potential.

Weave Add-On goes to version 1.0 beta 1

It looks like the Mozilla Labs Weave add-on is getting close to a 1.0 version, with Monday’s release of the 1.0 beta 1.

Weave is an add-on that can synchronize your bookmarks, history, saved passwords and tabs between multiple machines. It stores all this information encrypted on a Mozilla-run server, but you can also set up your own Weave server to store all the info.

The 1.0 release has a change in the database and API, so if you are using Weave, make sure you upgrade all the machines using it. If you’re running your own server, you need to upgrade it too (minor change in the Apache configuration).

iTunes University – Now with Zombies!

I’ve been hearing great things about the iTunes University, sporting audio and video from large Universities and Open Course material. Today I decided to check it out.

Apart from all the material on running your business, introductions to physics and biology etc., there are some truly interesting lectures. One that caught my eye was the University of Alabama’s “Zombies! Intro to Zombie Studies”. With episode titles as “She’s not your Mother anymore” and “The Living as Minority” this sounds like a winner.

I’m afraid though that the real title of the lecture is “Zombies! The Living Dead in Literature”, so this may be not as useful as I hoped in the event of a zombie invasion

Top 5 articles for October 2009

Here are the top 5 articles for October 2009:

  1. (5) Kensington Bluetooth 2.0 under Windows Vista 64-bit
  2. (2) Ubuntu 8.10 connect to Cisco VPN through vpnc
  3. (-) Ubuntu 8.10 installation GRUB error 18
  4. (1) Nagios – how to determine the name of a service in Windows
  5. (4) Blackberry not syncing with BES

How to add a Google Wave to WordPress

This looks like a cop-out, but here is how you do it:
[Read more...]