Google Wave arrived back in May with a blast of publicity — including a keynote of its own at Google's I/O conference. The initial story from the Google team was impressive, with Wave touted as a ...
Finally unveiled after years of development under the codename “Walkabout,” Google Wave combines popular features from across the web — feeds, shared documents, photo galleries, etc. — to redefine ...
I should note at the top of this post that I have not received an invitation for Google Wave. I haven’t seen the platform in action – other than a few screen shots that various bloggers and media have ...
Last year, Google pulled the curtain off one of their most widespread projects to date: Wave. It was a means to allow users, people, a way to instantly communicate with not just one person, but a ...
Are you looking forward to the day when Google Wave, Mountain View’s all-in-one communication and collaboration tool, goes public? Well, for a select group of users, that day is coming this fall.
While the world has focused on Google Wave as a mash-up of chat, e-mail, and document sharing, it’s really something else: Google Wave could be the Twitter that everyone really wants. Maybe it’s the ...
commentary Has it really only been four months since Google opened Wave to the public, inspiring hundreds of thousands of people to sign up? It feels like a lot longer. That's because it only took ...
Google Wave is a groundbreaking real-time collaborative tool that has the potential to be an ideal way for members of a group to work with one another. But it’s not clear how useful it will be in the ...
Six months on, Google reflects on the hype and disappointment of Wave's launch. We chat to Wave co-founder Lars Rasmussen about the service, and his plans for its future Luke Westaway is a senior ...
Fluent.io aims to transform email the way Wave … didn’t. Google: Google+ Doesn’t Mean The End Of Buzz, Orkut (Yet) With the success of Google+, the company must eventually decide what to do with Buzz ...
In ancient Greece, hubris-hybris-was a crime, a presumption toward the gods, characterized by wanton violence, insolence, outrage. This excess of pride, arrogance and ambition often led to the ...