My first impressions on Google Wave
July 19th, 2009
I am very excited to receive my Google Wave Developer Sandbox account.
Google Wave is actually three layers - the Product, the Protocol, and the Platform. What I am seeing in the Developer Sandbox is actually the Product using the Platform and the Protocol.
After spending a couple of hours with Google Wave product, to say the least, I am amazed at it’s complexity and it’s richness as a comprehensive unconstrained communication platform. If we can conquer it’s complexity perhaps by using a simpler Google Wave Application, I wonder what this would become in a year.
I cannot help but compare Wave with the traditional communication channels. So, here it goes:
Wave vs. Wiki/Microblogging/Email/IM/IRC:
- Wave messages live on the Wave server instead of the local client.
- A complete history of each Wave as to who did what and when is maintained on the server and it can be replayed any time.
- Google Wave is built on the Google Wave Federation Protocol is an extension to the core of XMPP.
- Liveness: Editing a wave is immediately visible to other users as it is edited it. You can watch your contact edit a wave live.
- Tagging and built-in search available.
- The Wave platform supports two types of Wave extensions - Gadgets and Robots. This gives Wave a lot of potential, openness and richness.
- Google Wave session is encrypted (https).
- Google Wave is actually three layers - the Product, the Protocol, and the Platform.
- The actual Google Wave UI seems to be very fast and responsive. But, is still very raw and unstable in a few areas. Some features seem to be disabled right now. This is understandable because the beta product is still possibly a few months away.
- Google Wave is a web application and so only a browser is required.
I was warned that IE 8 is not a supported browser. However, after I chose the option to continue, it worked. To be safe, I used Google Chrome 2.0
I plan to read, experiment and blog more about the Google Wave Platform, Protocol and Wave extensions in the near future.
August 2nd, 2009 at 11:31 pm
Interesting and informative. But will you write about this one more?
August 3rd, 2009 at 7:21 am
Thank you very much for that splendid article
August 3rd, 2009 at 5:27 pm
useful information. It’s the best
December 20th, 2009 at 2:28 pm
Excellent information. Blog more.