Google Wave invitations

Posted on December 1st, 2009 at 23:11, in .com.

Google WaveLike all the g33k5 out there, I have a Google Wave account. I haven’t really got the chance to use it since I had no one to talk to, except Vlad, from whom I originally got the invitation (Thank you, dude!). Anyway, opening my Wave account this evening, more out of curiosity and to dust it a little, I have noticed that I’ve received a Wave from Google with 16 invitations which I can send to anybody I want to. So, fellow geeks, if you think that you really want to use Wave, the email’s killer in Google’s opinion, please drop a comment here with your real email address and I will invite you to the system.

You must know from the beginning that the invitations are not sent instantaneously and that you might have to wait a while before you receive them. Please leave a comment here only if you really think you will use Google Wave, otherwise you might blow the chance of somebody else to enter the Wave…

See you in the Matrix! I mean Wave… ;)

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3 Comments

Anonymus Gravatar

Chris Quirola said

on December 1st, 2009,

at 23:15 hours

I’ve really looked into this google wave business and i really wanted to try it out.

I’m always on the computer chatting with my friends i would love the new experience

if you could please send me a invite at [email removed]…
thanks.

Anonymus Gravatar

Mihai said

on December 2nd, 2009,

at 10:59 hours

One for me please

Anonymus Gravatar

Florin said

on February 15th, 2010,

at 13:41 hours

Any thoughts on wave?

I looked at it, it’s great, as a software product. But I can’t really say I see its usefulness in that many cases, therefore I’d like to hear other people’s opinions too.

It’s great if your company’s way of working adapts to it, otherwise all its features are useless, IMO.

More precisely, you can replace face to face meetings with it, and even gain something from that, since all that’s being said remains written, but if your bosses, marketing ppl and so on simply refuse to use it, you’re stuck with face to face meetings.

Also, unless you really go about and start editing a document in a team of three, its wonderous sync features don’t really get to shine.

The biggest benefit I see is that it could unify wikis, chat rooms, forums and lots of other systems typically/often used by companies. But in order to really be useful, these companies have to adapt their working styles to wave. In the real world, many companies still regard forums as useless and block chat protocols. Some don’t even know what a wiki is, and if they did, they’d be scared to death by the idea of some newbie editing a boss’s contribution.

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