06.11.09
Making Waves
Finally had a chance to look at the Google Wave demo from the Google I/O conference a few days ago…
Wow.
The concept starts out really easy at the beginning of the video, but by about the fifteen minute mark my jaw was on the floor and it stayed there for the next hour. The collaboration aspect of this tool (tool? concept? meta-application? lifestyle?) is mindblowing.
In an environment like the marketing agency I’m working for, Waves can replace all(!!!) other tools we are currently using for communication and documentation, starting with email and instant messenger, document repositories and Wikis, and on through to Word, Excel, and Powerpoint. I’d be worried if my name were Microsoft.
I can totally see where a company installs their very own instance of the Wave server components on their machines, creates or buys some robot and widget extensions and then uses nothing else for the daily workflow in the office. There are obvious business opportunities for Google to offer one-click install packages with a commercial support license, and also a wide open market for third-party developers to create the server-side robots and the client-side widgets.
And in addition – among many other thoughts coming out of this video – the Wave concept opens many new doors for user interactions on websites. Personally, I can see many different ways how we can use some of the collaboration ideas (especially the many-users-one-document idea) for instance for MapSkip. This is a new way for users to collaborate on web pages and now that we have Google as a prominent trail blazer, there will be many new interaction schemes popping up all over the place. I can’t wait!


Loic said,
June 13, 2009 at 1:39 pm
This looks pretty awesome. I checked out their presentation. Although the stream died after only 12 minutes of the 80 minute presentation, I can’t wait to start using Waves.
thomas said,
June 13, 2009 at 3:16 pm
You really want to see the rest of the video – I think I saw somewhere a blog that had a best-of reel of the long video, which maybe enough to get an idea of what they are doing… but really, if you have a chance check out the rest of the full stream for the full impact.