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Need a Google Wave invite? Be patient… or dress up

Need a Google Wave invite? Be patient... or dress upInvites to try Google Wave, the revolutionary real-time communication and collaboration tool, started going out around ten hours ago. If you haven’t got one yet, be patient – you might still be lucky.

Around the time Google flicked the switch on the invites, one of the team behind the launch tweeted “Wave invites starting … will take many many many many hours to get them all out! We are so very grateful for all the interest!!”

Word processor EtherPad launches Google Wave like “Time Slider” feature. Very impressive.

Picture 3EtherPad is a collaborative, real-time text editor designed to make working together on written documents slick and easy. With etherpad it’s possible for two (or more) people to work together and see instantaneous alterations to the document as you work. Although Google docs features document collaboration, the changes are not instant and working on a document can feel a little like working on an early version of Word. Etherpad does things differently and this latest feature of theirs is a perfect example of how.

Google Wave coming to (some) Google Apps users September 30th

Google Wave coming to (some) Google Apps users September 30th

Google Wave coming to (some) Google Apps users September 30thGoogle Wave, the in private beta personal communication and collaboration tool, has generated an enormous am

Google Wave Preview Opens to the Public on September 30th

 

Google Wave Preview Opens to the Public on September 30thThe Google Wave preview has officially been scheduled to open up to the public on September 30th according Wave API Tech Lead Douwe Osinga.

Leading up to opening up of the Google Wave preview, Osinga has outlined specific areas of improvement and new features in the official Google Wave group:

Extensions

Design good flow for adding extensions, which includes:

Google Wave for iPhone looks awesome – now with realtime text display

 

Developer accounts for testing Google Wave are now in circulation and the lucky blighters at Engadget have been among those trying it out. Although it’s certainly not ready for primetime yet, the revolutionary collaborative communication platform is certainly looking just as exciting as it did at the Google I/O conference in May.

What’s particularly interesting is the iPhone version of Wave. Using the HTML 5 capability of the mobile Safari browser, it allows for almost every feature of the desktop version. Back when the mobile version of Wave was revealed, realtime text display was missing as Google hadn’t worked out how to transmit all that data reliably. A solution has been developed and text now appears on the phone’s screen character-by-character as it’s typed by another user, just as it does on the desktop.