Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Google Wave Use Case

Source: ReadWriteWeb.com

wave_logo_sep09.jpgLast month we wrote a short post about using Google Wave for live blogging. Today, during Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook privacy press conference, we decided to put this theory into practice and live blogged the event with Wave. The reaction to our experiment was overwhelmingly positive, so we decided to share how we it up for our live blogging session today.

Lessons Learned

Here are a few things we learned today:

  • Wave worked like a charm. We did not experience any hiccups and our readers were very happy about seeing us type the updates in real time - live blogging really doesn't get more "live" than this. Having Google's infrastructure as the basis for your live blog definitely helps when you have lots of people hitting your blog at the same time.
  • Adding a few extra people to Wave allows you to share the workload. If possible, have at least one extra person around to create and upload screenshots. We used a Skype backchannel during the event to coordinate in the background, but you could also use a second Wave for this.

A Few Things to Keep in Mind

  • The default font size in the Wave embed is too small, and changing it for every new wavelet takes too long. Hopefully Wave will soon allow us to set a slightly larger font size as the default.
  • Wave didn't work well for Safari users and is obviously also still an issue for Internet Explorer.
  • Uploading screenshots to Wave is easy, just click on the attachments icon, pick the desired image and hit submit. Sadly, you can't just drag and drop images from your desktop onto your browser (yet), so having a second person to manage that is helpful.
  • Spell checking in Wave is still a bit difficult even when you have a second person edit your posts.

Read More here

No comments:

ShareThis