Or just google's take on Microsoft Live Meeting, Webex and hundreds of other who host meetings and/or provide online collaboration tools.
It's like "MS, you attacked Google Maps and Google Search, so we'll attack Hotmail (MS Live), and MS Office, and your other stuf...we'll even create our own browser"
And don't get me started with the social networking sites....this is Web 2.0?
I was looking at it from a developer's point of view and I can fully appreciate how cool the live sync is. And how cool it is that the whole system is based on a tree of xml files. Making it possible to live sync anything that can be described with an xml. The rest of the GUI gadgets are just icing on the cake.
I work in a corporate environment where we make big design documents collaboratively and I could really appreciate this kind of system. Even google docs don't have it this good. I don't know if you can imagine the headaches we get from using microsoft office. And if the server application can be hosted on a closed network then it means that companies (like mine) can actually use it!
Live sync like it's done in the video may look like a small thing for a non-developer but trust me: it's truly innovative.
I watched the entire video a while back, and found it quite anticlimactic. Old technology in a shiny new package is all. It's always been easy to interact with something in a single known environment.
I've managed to get on it now, but unfortunately the only people that can invite at the moment are people that are signed up to be Google Beta testers.
Apparently they're capping the usage at 100,000 for the time being, so there might be quite a wait!
Tyberius Prime
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist with Finglongers
From: Germany Insane since: Sep 2001
posted 10-28-2009 19:12
I've also managed to score an account - hit me with an email (via ->Tyberius Prime , send email at the bottom) to learn my handle
There are two problems I have with the interface, one is it's incredibly slow (I'm using Chromuim) and the other is that I can't view a wave properly (especially if there is embedded content) if my browser isn't widened or the wave panel isn't maximised, I currently run a window about 1050px wide.
Functionally I actually like it, and do see a use for it. it's great for knowledge sharing, and realy requires people to actively get involved, it seems to be suffering from the same problems Wiki's had when they first appeared.
Maybe someone will come up with an Engine that allows everyone to interact in true VR - now that might help me stifle a yawn.
And by everyone you mean...more like the Internet lets everybody on a webpage, and not so much like Second Life allows 75 people on a CPU? Or more like 3D VR?