The Game is Changing in ‘Waves’
The web world has always been quick to call something a “game changer” or a “killer app” at a moment’s notice. These sorts of declarations come largely from the early adopter crowd; a group of individuals who play a critical role in the advancement of technology. Often times, making these sorts of statements are either: 1) unwarranted, 2) unjustified, or simply 3) premature.
But yesterday, when Google demoed their Wave product at the IO conference in San Francisco [video below], everybody watching knew that today was not like any other day. It was very clear that the game had just changed, and drastically at that. Google’s Wave was a project started over two years ago attempting to “re-invent” e-mail as we knew it. In doing so, the Australian-based team at Google uncovered an amazing communication and collaboration platform.
[too long? ... read this great Google Wave breakdown courtesy of Mashable]
The service boasts the most interactive and real-time communication experience we have ever seen. Remember thinking that it couldn’t get any more real-time than Twitter? Or maybe even FriendFeed? Wave literally blows these communication outlets out of the water (no pun intended) in terms of its connectivity and real-timeyness with it’s character-by-character chat-style communication flow. No longer do you have to wait for an individual to post the reply, comment, or update; because if you are both on the “wave” at the same time, you are watching each other type, character by character, virtually lag-free! Overload? Maybe. Game-changing? Absolutely.
In addition to Wave’s powerful social implications lies Wave’s incredible enterprise capabilities. Wave revamps online collaboration, now making wikis feel archaeic in nature. The business implications on such a platform are immediately apparent.

How did Google do it?
- First, the team looked at the most dominant form of communication on the internet today: e-mail.
- Then the team asked, “What if email were invented today instead of 40 years ago?”
- Then they set out to essentially “re-invent” email using all of today’s communication tools the web has to offer
- As a result, the team created the most complete communication platform in history.
Just how pervasive will Google Wave become?
Is there a chance Google Wave won’t take off? Yeah, I guess there’s a chance…but a very slight one. Google’s focus on open source architecture and developer interaction leads me to believe that we are in for one long ride, on one very big wave.
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Bob_Jones
