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Graham Perrin

Google Wave - 0 views

  • Google Wave is a new communication service
  • formatted text, photos, videos, maps, and more
  • free-form workspace
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • write documents collaboratively
  • plan events
  • discuss
  • create a wave and add people
  • formatted text, photos, gadgets, and even feeds from other sources on the web
  • reply
  • or edit the wave
  • concurrent rich-text editing
  • "playback" to rewind the wave to see how it evolved
  • API that could be used to extend the service
  • Wave protocol that allows anyone to run a "wave" server
  • available later this year
  •  
    Google Wave on the unofficial Google Operating System blog.
Janos Haits

Rizzoma Wave - 6 views

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    Rizzoma has re-engineered Google Wave getting rid of bad shit, leaving the best feautures and adding many new adjuvants. Try Rizzoma if you are looking: for alternative solution to Google Wave, to continue to work with your waves, for new and improved UX in collaborative communications
Graham Perrin

Google Oz coders crossbreed email with IM * The Register - 0 views

  • Google has unveiled a new-age communication and collaboration tool
  • Google Wave
  • online application
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • demonstration of what is possible in the browser
  • HTML 5 standard
  • email with IM and document-sharing
  • threaded conversations between multiple users
  • threads - or "waves," as Google insists on calling them
  • APIs for adding "waves" to other web services
  • Wave protocol for communication
  • open-source "the lion's share" of Wave's code
  • open protocol
  •  
    Google Wave in The Register.
Graham Perrin

Opinion: Google's wave drowns the bling in Microsoft's Bing - Software - iTnews Australia - 0 views

  • The browser battle renewed today
  • Microsoft's hand may have been moved by the launch of Wolfram|Alpha
  • much promise in connecting people to knowledge
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • the first round clearly goes to Wave
  • collaborative technology that blurs the lines between email, wiki, SMS and Twitter
  • Wave integrates many of the features of disparate systems in common use
  • application programming interfaces would make it easier for third-parties to customise web applications
  • Microsoft's Bing, launched under the NineMSN banner in Australia
  • Go offline and the wave data stayed with you
  • ultimately it would mean a user could save all their work in the browser and dump it on the intertubes when they go back online
  • waves worked best on standards-compliant, Webkit browsers
  • emails (which could be translated between languages in real time) to a wave user
  • wave that was turned back into an e-mail
  • The same held true for instant messages and tweets
  • getting people to change their rusted-on habits
  • a shift from discrete applications to just one to handle all communications
    • Graham Perrin
       
      This is almost certainly too much for me to swallow.
    • Graham Perrin
       
      I like discrete applications.
  • Safari
  • Mozilla
  • Chrome
Adam Mills

Google ready to ride Wave into the future of email - 1 views

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    Today, Google unveiled its new application, Wave, to developers in San Francisco. Branded the "email of the future", Wave may encompass some of your favorite websites and streamline them into one easy to use application. Come check it out and share your thoughts.\n
Adam Mills

Google ready to ride Wave into the future of email - 0 views

  •  
    Today, Google unveiled its new application, Wave, to developers in San Francisco. Branded the "email of the future", Wave may encompass some of your favorite websites and streamline them into one easy to use application. Come check it out and share your thoughts.
Bryan R. Adams

How to use Facebook in Google Wave | whytwitter™ - 16 views

  •  
    How to use Facebook in Google Wave - Video + manual
Graham Perrin

Google Wave has developers buzzing | Webware - CNET - 0 views

  • Developer support is crucial to the success of Google Wave
  • the genius behind Google Wave is
  • in the way Google has assembled a set of existing technologies into an attractive platform for developers
awqi zar

Extensions List (Google Wave Extensions List) - 11 views

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    The Original Google Wave Extensions List. Full list or Robots and Gadgets, with descriptions, and more information. This is the list others copied from.
Kheeran D

Google Wave - 0 views

  • communication and collaboration on the web
    • sheryl barnes
       
      Pretty cool, huh?
    • Kheeran D
       
      Wave looks awsome. I hope it all comes together the way that they expect.
  •  
    Preview, at the time of bookmarking.
  •  
    Preview, at the time of bookmarking.
  •  
    Preview, at the time of bookmarking.
Janos Haits

Wave - 9 views

  •  
    "Get Google Docs like coediting experience for your favorite apps:"
  •  
    AOL Mail Login AOL Webmail Sign In
Matteo Spreafico

Web Hooks / FrontPage - 0 views

  • The concept of a WebHook is simple. A WebHook is an HTTP callback: an HTTP POST that occurs when something happens; a simple event-notification via HTTP POST.
  • A web application implementing WebHooks will POST a message to a URL when certain things happen. When a web application enables users to register their own URLs, the users can then extend, customize, and integrate that application with their own custom extensions or even with other applications around the web. For the user, WebHooks are a way to receive valuable information when it happens, rather than continually polling for that data and receiving nothing valuable most of the time. WebHooks have enormous potential and are limited only by your imagination! (No, it can't wash the dishes. Yet.)
  • Push is the simplest of reasons to use WebHooks. As was just stated above, no more polling every couple of minutes to find out if there is new information. Just register a WebHook and receive the data at your doorstep as soon as it exists.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • A Pipe happens when your WebHook not only receives real-time data, but goes on to do something new and meaningful with it, triggering actions unrelated to the original event. For example, you create a script, register its URL at a photo site, and have it email you when your mother posts a new photo.
  • Plugins: processing data and giving something in return This is where the entire web becomes a programming platform. You can use this form of WebHooks to allow others to extend your application. Facebook's Application Platform uses WebHooks in this way, and so does Google Wave's robot integration. The general idea is that a web application sending out data via WebHooks will also use the response to modify its own data. At Facebook, when you access an app, Facebook sends a WebHook out to your application saying "Hey, someone's accessing your application, what do I do?!" The application responds with, "Show the user this page..." Facebook does so, and the pattern continues in the same manner as you continue to use the application. At Google Wave, when you do something in a wave, any robot you've added as a participant is notified via a WebHook, and the robot has the ability to modify the wave in its http response. Implement WebHooks in this way in your application if you want to allow others to truly extend and enhance the abilities of your application.
  • By letting the user specify a URL for various events, the application will POST data to those URLs when the events occur. With the cheap availability of PHP hosting and even easier simple app/script hosting like AppJet or Scriptlets, handling the POST data becomes fairly trivial. How you use it is up to you and whatever you want to accomplish.
Eloise Pasteur

Dusan Writer's Metaverse » Google's Lively: The Virtual World is No Metavers... - 0 views

  • As GigaOm reports, it’s more akin to the 800 lb gorilla in the room giving a wave and saying “Yeah, I’m here.” Only it turns out that it’s wearing a tutu and has blue hair.
  • Instead, Google gives us. Hmmm. Well, it’s kind of like IMVU. Or Kaneva. And certainly a lot like Vivaty, whose integration into Facebook makes it the current, um, 3D Facebook:
  • Why Be Lively? So what gives? So far, there’s nothing NEW here, nothing that wasn’t done on a 100 other platforms. So why do it at all?
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Google’s Lively is basically a chat client. But then to some, so is Second Life. And it has some advantages: - The Google name and reach - Clean, sculpty looking objects - A small download - A peppy, bright, bubbly sort of chat space - Link to your Google profile and log-in information (G-mail etc.) - The ability to embed youTube videos and watch them with your friends - A maniacal giggle (with its downside that it’s text activated, just say the word laugh and you’re laughing as in “That’s nothing to laugh about”) And it has distinct disadvantages as well, in particular no support for the Mac (were they in SUCH a huge rush? Did the Vivaty launch onto Facebook accelerate their plans ahead of support for the Mac platform?), bugs, crashes, avatar limits, and a bit of a learning curve.
  • may be protected by intellectual property rights which are owned by the sponsors or advertisers who provide that Content to Google
  • And on advertising: 17.1 Some of the Services are supported by advertising revenue and may display advertisements and promotions. These advertisements may be targeted to the content of information stored on the Services, queries made through the Services or other information. 17.2 The manner, mode and extent of advertising by Google on the Services are subject to change without specific notice to you.
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    Some commentary on Lively, its possibilities as an SL killer, and its possible revenue stream. Looks more like advertising heaven so little or no chance for user created content?
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