Post

Read a Wave in a Fast, Simple Interface

In Post on 2010-01-31 by Joshua Tagged: , , , , , ,

Want to share a pub­lic wave with some­one who hasn’t jumped on the Wave band­wagon? Need to pub­lish a Wave in a way that keeps it safe from edi­tors and wanna-be trolls? How ’bout this Wave Reader that takes a wave and dis­plays it as a web page with­out the reader need­ing an account.

wavereader.png

Take the URL http://antimatter15.com/misc/read/? and tack on the wave ID you want to pub­lish, and BAM! a sim­ple pub­lished wave. For exam­ple: “Things to do in Ade­laide”, a wave put together by Taryn Hicks. It’s shiny and blue, and the infor­ma­tion is easy to read with­out need­ing a Wave account. In addi­tion the cre­ator has made it pos­si­ble to pub­lish a pri­vate wave, sim­ply by adding the gwavereader@googlewave.com bot to the wave!

A tool like this should be an offi­cial fea­ture of Google Wave. One of my biggest con­cerns is that as wave becomes more pop­u­lar, peo­ple will begin to pub­lish tonnes of handy infor­ma­tion as waves only (this has already begun). The prob­lem with the cur­rent embed­ding tools are that they require the reader to have a Wave account, and just as impor­tantly a browser that can han­dle Wave. Sadly this is the oppo­site of the open and free web the founders of the Inter­net envi­sioned. But with tools like the Wave Reader, we’re on the way to get­ting sim­ple, clean HTML pages of infor­ma­tion the way we’re accus­tomed to. To gen­er­ate some clean HTML you can use to make a totally sta­tic page out of a wave, add &html=0 to the URL.

So head over to the Art of Wave Reader to get a good idea of how to use the tool and pick up a book­marklet that will open your cur­rent wave in Wave Reader. You can also down­load the code. You may notice it’s now up to ver­sion 5.2 (the blog post was about 4.6) and is a marked improve­ment from even a week ago, now mak­ing exten­sive use of HTML5 and CSS3. Wave Reader is released under a GNU Gen­eral Pub­lic Licence v3.

I can’t rec­om­mend Wave Reader highly enough and wish a fea­ture like this was baked into wave. It’s fast, good look­ing, and very useful.

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