Posts Tagged ‘official help’

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Google Wave Gets Email Notifications

In Post on 2010-03-05 by Joshua Tagged: , , , ,

One of the prob­lems with Google Wave for the non-geek crowd has been how you know you have a new wave?

For ded­i­cated geeks, there are browser exten­sions, OS spe­cific soft­ware, iPhone Push noti­fi­ca­tions, and more.

But most of these don’t fig­ure in the non-geek arse­nal for man­ag­ing the wash of infor­ma­tion from the inter­net. And for reg­u­lar folk con­vinc­ing them to use Wave with­out these sorts of noti­fi­ca­tions will be hard sim­ply because they don’t want to bother check­ing for new waves as well as new emails.

Con­vinc­ing them may have just got­ten eas­ier how­ever with the release of inte­grated email noti­fi­ca­tions for your Wave inbox. In a post on the offi­cial Google Wave Blog, Ged Ellis explains how to turn on email noti­fi­ca­tions for new waves. Using the drop down list next to the inbox link (it’s hid­den until you hover over it) you can choose an email address to have noti­fi­ca­tions sent to. The tool even picked my Google Apps email even though it’s not my offi­cial Wave address because I’ve set it as pri­mary in my Google profile.

NotificationsMenu.png

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Submitty and Gadgitty — Two Bots to Help Wave Developers

In Post on 2010-03-02 by Joshua Tagged: , , ,

Recently, the Wave Team have made a big push to pub­li­cise more bots and exten­sions. In a post to the Google Wave Help forum, Kylie announced that some users might start see­ing a new Exten­sions link in their nav­i­ga­tion panel. Then enter­pris­ing Wavers noted that any­one could get access to this Exten­sion infor­ma­tion with a search for [group:google-wave-extension-gallery@googlegroups.com].

Now Google have made it eas­ier than ever to sub­mit an exten­sion to the Wave Exten­sion review team using a sim­ple bot.

submitty.PNG

Cre­ate a new wave and add the Sub­mitty bot (submitty-bot@appspot.com), and Sub­mitty will cre­ate a sub­mis­sion form for you to fill out. At the bot­tom are a cou­ple of check­boxes. If you check either of these boxes, you’ll be prompted to fill in more infor­ma­tion about your bot and/or gad­get. Finally, you add the Exten­sion Review Group (google-wave-extensions-review@googlegroups.com) to your wave to sub­mit your extension.

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Lars: Remove Participant Feature due “Within a Month”

We have begun test­ing remove par­tic­i­pant inter­nally and hope­fully it will hit exter­nally within a month

Lars Ras­mussen, one of the lead Wave developers.

In a Wave enti­tled “Google Wave User Black List”, Lars piped up to offer advice on the best way to avoid and take action against known trolls and abusers and offered the above tit­bit about the immi­nent release of the abil­ity to remove par­tic­i­pants from Wave.

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Posted 2010-02-13 by Joshua

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Restore a Wave to a former state, or make it Read-Only.

In Post on 2010-01-23 by Joshua Tagged: , , ,

In the first major update to the Google Wave client in what feels like ages, the Wave team have imple­mented two new fea­tures that will make a big dif­fer­ence in man­ag­ing your waves. The first fixes one of the most shock­ing things about the first release: that any­one you invited could come along and edit any part of your wave. Of course the point of Wave is col­lab­o­ra­tion, but some­times it was con­ceiv­able that you might not like any­one to be able to hack away at a wave, par­tic­u­larly once a wave was made pub­lic. Many good use­ful waves were effec­tively destroyed by grant­ing the pub­lic edit­ing rights.

the read-only tool in action
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Group Waves

In Link on 2009-12-09 by Joshua Tagged: , ,

Google has just unveiled their plans for group waves. The Google Wave Blog out­lines the steps to set up a Google Group (yes, you have to use another tool) then add the group as a con­tact in Google Wave.

The ser­vice does not yet allow you to add users by their googlewave.com account (gmail.com only), and the per­mis­sions can only be han­dled through the Google Groups inter­face. It also seems that to avoid spam (being able to send mes­sages to an every­one in a pub­lic group at once) users must pro-actively seek out the group wave and fol­low it to move it to their inbox [cur­rently wait­ing for con­fir­ma­tion of this].

Like any Wave fea­ture, this is still being devel­oped and its behav­iour could change over time. The Wave team have said they will con­tinue to enhance the groups fea­ture to make groups eas­ier to navigate.

Wav­ing with groups — Google Wave Blog.

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Follow, Follow, Follow, Follow the Waves You Choose

In Post on 2009-11-12 by Joshua Tagged: , , ,

Prob­a­bly the most impor­tant part of the Wave expe­ri­ence for new user has been the abil­ity to search for pub­lic waves to join. With­out Pub­lic Waves many peo­ple would not have enough of a net­work to really expe­ri­ence Wave in full, and the Wave com­mu­nity may not have grown as quickly as it has. Pub­lic Waves have allowed quick access to tips and tricks, unof­fi­cial sup­port and gen­eral chit chat on a diverse range of topics.

The down­side of this was a sig­nif­i­cant gotcha: just click­ing a pub­lic wave was enough to add you to the Wave per­ma­nently and drag the wave into your inbox. From that point, your only recourse to silence the wave was to mute it (archiv­ing only works as long as no one else con­tributes), and mut­ing does not remove you from the wave.

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When to use Google Wave [Google Wave Help]

Some use cases for Google Wave at the Wave Help page. A quick run down of how you could poten­tially use Wave if you’re stuck for ideas.

Using Google Wave

Tagged: , , on 2009-10-29 by Joshua

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Expecting invites to give out? This is why you might not have them

In Link on 2009-10-23 by Joshua Tagged: , , ,

One thing I’ve been won­der­ing is how we’ll get the chance to invite more peo­ple to Wave. I was one of the lucky ones who got in on the first round, and had invites to share, but those I’ve invited haven’t been so lucky. Cur­rently my invite counter is sit­ting at “00” too.

As soon as we’re con­fi­dent that the sys­tem can accept more users, we will add a wave to your account that allows you to nom­i­nate friends and col­leagues for an account. Once you have the capa­bil­ity to invite peo­ple, the wave appear in your inbox.

How do I invite peo­ple to try Google Wave? [Google Wave Help]

So we’ll be see­ing this even­tu­ally (good­ness knows how it’s added — magic fairy dust per­haps), so don’t fret — All in good time!

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Google Wave won’t run in Inter­net Explorer.

Google Wave depends on strong JS and DOM ren­der­ing per­for­mance to pro­vide a desktop-like expe­ri­ence in the browser. HTML5’s offline stor­age and web work­ers will enable us to add great fea­tures with­out hav­ing to com­pro­mise on per­for­mance. Unfor­tu­nately, Inter­net Explorer, still used by the major­ity of the Web’s users, has not kept up with such fairly recent devel­op­ments in Web technology

Google Wave Devel­oper Blog

Google Wave won’t run in Internet Explorer.

Tagged: , , on 2009-10-16 by Joshua

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Wave Protocol Installation Instructions

In Link on 2009-07-22 by Joshua Tagged: , ,

Google has released the first pro­to­type Wave Pro­to­col Server, for peo­ple to begin the steps to cre­at­ing their own Wave servers. The code requires a Java enabled server with Open­fire XMPP installed. The instal­la­tion instruc­tions include the details of prepar­ing Open­fire for use as a Wave server.

Instal­la­tion of the Wave Pro­to­col [Google Code]