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You know me so well :)

I really do hope they're successful in taming Wave's UI complexity and making it actually useful for writing documents collaboratively. Right now Wave is geared towards adding commentary (which it does well), but that isn't very useful if you don't already have a mostly-complete document to mark up. Even with just one editor Wave can be really obnoxious if you try to write something more than a paragraph in one blurb -- it could really use an Etherpad mode!

As someone who's bet on Appjet before, what odds would you give of them pulling that off at Google? By tearing down Etherpad, they've clearly gone all in, but there's a substantial team on multiple continents working on Wave, and they're already set in some rather weird ways that the Appjet guys would have to reform significantly.

Do you understand how their users would be at least apprehensive about this? I should have bought a private copy when I had the chance...

I do have faith that they'll make a splash on the Wave team, but I doubt that they'll be able to fix Wave so that it's a good Etherpad replacement in the next three months.



Personally the best case I can see for wave is that some of the features get absorbed into GMail. I can't see it succeeding on its own.

(I just tried it out for the first time). Horrible bloated slow UI, hideous scrollbars, and pretty underwhelming.

It didn't seem to solve any problems I had.

So thinking about real useful features people want, how about they add a 'collaborate on email' mode in gmail, where you can write etherpad style email drafts with other people and when you're all happy, click send. I'd rather they work on things people want like that.




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