Waving around
Posted on | November 3, 2009
I got my Wave account a while ago, but I was not using it as none of the people I communicate with, was using the service. Last week I was nudged to become an active Wave user as the backchannel of eComm Europe 09 was split between the latest Google product and Twitter. I decided to write this post as a compilation of my personal thoughts regarding Google Wave and the underlying protocol. I know I might be wrong in many ways :)
Google Wave is not cool
Wave is not cool. At all. The user interface is buggy and unfriendly. A lot of people have been complaining about the search interface - [in:inbox]?!? Furthermore it is absolutely unusable on small displays. One gets the feeling that Wave was designed to be used on a 24″ widescreen display or a larger monitor - future proof. The vertical column design is not really a space friendly solution and there are better options that have been explored by several email/IM/twitter clients.
Can I have a desktop client please?
I love web services but for a communication tool integrated notifications are an absolute must. Waveboard is a partial solution, but still in a very early stage.
If Wave came from a startup
Have you ever asked yourself if you would really be prepared to use Wave if it came form a startup? I would say that a startup presenting a product like wave would be tore apart from the tech blogs (TechCrunch, RWW, Mashable). Most probably they would not even publish a story about it and just ditch it as a crappy real-time hybrid of email/IM and a document collaboration suite. Please comment on this as I would really love to hear if you would be willing to test Wave if it came from a startup (let’s say from Slovenia).
If Wave was a Microsoft product
Now imagine Wave as a Microsoft product. Would you give it a try? Would you be so patient with it as most people are being with Google’s product? I am willing to bet that if Microsoft launched something like Wave there would have been a lot of media buzz and people would try the service, but the feedback would be much worse than with Google. I can see the headlines: “M$ Flops again with a strange service only Ballmer would use!”
The Protocol is Cool
Basically the only part I like about all this Wave thing is the underlying protocol which promises to deliver some interesting use cases if it will be open enough and allow federated waving. From my point of view internal wave clients might be quite useful for communication and brainstorming, however I do not see wave replacing email or IM any time soon.
These are just some of my views summarized in a blog post. Feel free to share your opinion in the comments.
Comments
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darknewt
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tomazstolfa
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Tim Behrsin
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Natan
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tomazstolfa
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Aleš Rosina

