Read a Wave in a Fast, Simple Interface

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.

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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.

Wave Protocol Installation Instructions

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]

The Impact of Wave on Open Source

If I sound excited, it’s because I am. Google wave has potential to move way beyond yet another buzz-word for the “new-media crowd”. It has the chance to grow some real horns and make a big improvement in the way we develop free software.

Will Google Wave revolutionise free software collaboration?

Free Software Magazine’s Ryan Cartwright on the potential of Waves for Open Source software development.

Wave the Protocol

The final and most exciting of the “Three Ps” is Wave as a protocol. The Product is Google owned and operated. The Platform enhances their offering. The Protocol opens the code up and makes it available for others to use, re-create, and improve. From the day Google Wave becomes available, the Wave Protocol will allow other parties to create competing products that will interoperate with Google’s offering.

To me, this is the most exciting and wonderful part of Google’s announcement. No one company stands a chance of dethroning email as the reigning form of communication on the ’net. By opening up their idea, Wave stands a chance of becoming the way we communicate into the next decade. Only by giving users a choice about where their business critical data is stored will users begin to trust Wave like they have learned to trust email.

Google have stated that when they launch Google Wave, anyone will be able to download the “lions share” of the code to run on their own servers promising that the open-source code will run and operate almost exactly the same as the Product they offer on Google’s own servers. They liken it to the SMTP (email sending) protocol - open for everyone to create and use their own implementations as they see fit, and email has taken off because of it.

Wave Preview at the Google I/O Developer Conferencee

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Google Wave was recently announced at the Google I/O developer conference. This is an amazing video and well worth the hour and twenty it will take you to watch it. If you’d like to know what the future of web communication might look like, you can get a head start right here.