Get the real story via our bi-monthly newsletter

Search

    4
    0

rss

Send to a colleague

Home > Commentary > Trends Archive > Riding the Google Wave

Browse TrendWatch Blog

Recent Blog Entries

The Complete Archive

Trends by Vendor


TrendWatch by Channel

Web Content Management Trends

Enterprise Portals Trends

ECM Trends

Web Analytics Trends

Enterprise Search Trends

SharePoint Trends

Digital & Media Asset Management Trends

XML & Component Content Management Trends

E-mail Archiving & Management Trends

Enterprise Social Software & Collaboration Trends


Report Excerpt

The Enterprise Collaboration & Community Software Report looks at... End-user interface in Traction TeamPage

"The ability to slice and dice information in various ways, comment on it, tag it, and build collaborative knowledgebases is very powerful. But this very feature-richness also makes the platform a bit daunting, especially because its somewhat dated interface doesn't always work as effectively as most competitors' to simplify your options."

(p. 233)

More about The Enterprise Collaboration & Community Software Report

Our customers say

"There are well over 100 pages of detailed analysis on topics such as the business case for social software, a vivisection of social software types and services, and scenario-based vignettes of social software. There is an extremely deep dive into the actual inventory of software products and platforms, with descriptions, ratings, feature matrices and screenshots. And in classic fashion, the executive summary is saved until the end.
- - Scott Mark,
Blogger on Social Software

NEW at CMS Watch

The Search and Information Access ReportThe Search & Information Access Report: This newly updated 341-page Search and Information Access Report critically evaluates 23 Search and Information Access offerings from around the globe... Read more

The Enterprise Collaboration & Community Software ReportThe Enterprise Collaboration & Community Software Report : This newly updated research critically evaluates 27 Enterprise Collaboration and Community Software products head-to-head... Read more

The Enterprise Content Management ReportThe Enterprise Content Management Report : This newly updated research critically evaluates 32 Enterprise Content Management products head-to-head... Read more

 
 

TrendWatch Blog

Riding the Google Wave

28-Oct-2009   --  

Time to put the Wave to the test. Over the past few weeks, Google opened up Wave, its "online tool for real-time communication and collaboration." There's been quite the invite-frenzy with Google using the doorman's trick. You have to be on the list to get in, so you'll have to wait in line; but since you can see there's a huge line, there must be a good reason to want to get in. So you want in, right?

Well, don't feel bad for not being where the cool kids are, since most will "log in and stare at it blankly." What do you actually do with this thing?

To avoid that problem, Jon Marks decided to bring his own group to the Wave last Friday. He added Irina Guseva, Ian Truscott, Justin Cormack, Andrew Liles, Philippe Parker, and myself; "analysts, journalists, vendors, system integrators." Assembled as "The Motley Crew," we set out to "communicate and collaborate real-time" and produce a blog post in exactly one hour, including coming up with a topic and writing the narrative. (We were also supposed to publish this as-is, but like Ian Truscott and Philippe Parker, I prefer the meta-level and write about the writing, rather than letting the Wave roll up.)

There are two interesting sides to this; the social interaction, and the technical workings. First of all, there's the notion of "real-time collaboration" mixed with "real-time communication."

In Wave, as you collaborate, you see what people type as they type it -- the letters appear as they are keyed in, with colored cursors carrying the writers' initials. Lines disappear, then suddenly appear elsewhere (the mystery of telecut and telepaste.) It's a bit unnerving at first, but then again, it's not unlike working on the same document in Writely (now better known as Google Docs); it's just slightly more polished. But honestly, how many people do you know that work on Google Docs simultaneously to produce actual, publishable work?

Then, Wave adds complexity to what Docs does by also, simultaneously, allowing communication, and threaded replies. Which can then be edited by someone else. So it starts off as a simple enough thread (like many comments on blogs); then, suddenly, someone will edit your text and it becomes rather confusing. Who did that? (You'll have to watch the replay to see.) And why? (Is that a question you put in a reply, or edit in the same text?)

As the resulting text describes it, "in the beginning, we were Drowning, not Waving," but by the end, we started getting the hang of it. You can judge for yourself: Irina Guseva published the text verbatim immediately when we finished; and Jon Marks even has the Wave itself embedded.

That embedded Wave brings me to the second part: the technical issues. The Wave we wrote is now public (so you can see it), but that also means anyone (with a Wave account) can still jump in and add or edit. You can't save a Wave; you can't even print it. So what do you do with it once you're done, other than a regular copy/paste?

Clearly, Wave is still in "preview," and that's also apparent in the interface. That is to say, it isn't very feature rich, has some quirks, and some issues. I'm still quite unsure where my reply goes when I click "reply" (in the nested thread, or down below? It's almost random.) But more annoyingly, the assorted browsers were under a lot of stress with everyone hacking away, and most crashed at some point. (Unsurprisingly, Chrome seemed to be the only one doing fine.)

There was some background noise in our collaborative effort on the fact that the Wave protocol certainly supports a lot of the things you could think up to do with it. But right now, we're in desperate need of tools both inside the Wave and outside of it, and they haven't been built yet. There are a few Gadgets (I counted about 8 last week) you can add to your Wave, and even fewer desktop applications (I used Waveboard, but it's Mac-only and doesn't add a lot of functionality.)

And how do you know you're in a Wave if you're not signed in? Jon had to chase us down via Twitter, mail, and IM to get us there. Wave is supposed to supersede all of those, so having e-mail notifications would defy its purpose. Right now, that means you'll have to stay signed in... and stare at it blankly.

So where this leaves us for now is basically the same as when I first wrote about Wave five months ago. We'll have to see whether developers cook up interesting applications, and whether users will actually find effective use for them. If you're not on Wave yet, there's no need to rush. It'll still be there in a couple of months.

- Submitted by: Adriaan Bloem, Analyst - Twitter: adriaanbloem

All Social Channel Trends

Join the conversation

Digg This! Search Technorati Tag it on Del.icio.us




Get a Free Sample

Wondering about CMS Watch research? Sign up to receive free samples of any of our products.




What we do

CMS Watch™ evaluates content-oriented technologies, publishing head-to-head comparative reviews of leading solutions. What makes us special?

  • Our critical analysis exposes product weaknesses as well as strengths
  • We deliver unrivaled technical depth and comprehensive project advice
  • Our research is led by international topic experts
  • We only work for buyers -- never for vendors

Contact us

CMS Watch

info@cmswatch.com

3470 Olney-Laytonsville Road Suite 131

Olney, MD USA 20832

1 800 325 6190

1 617 340 6464

UK: +44 2033181911

Fax: +1 617 340 3541