Does Google Wave answer Enterprise 2.0 Collaboration needs?
by Wim Soens
The past few weeks, it was impossible not to notice the desperate quest for Google Wave invites on Twitter. One blogger even tried to auction-off his invite on eBay, with bids reaching $5,000 before the auction was shut down. Many years in the software business have taught me to carefully consider which waves to ride – or more importantly which ones to ignore. But the buzz about Google Wave made me very curious to say the least. Obviously, I’m especially interested to find out how Google Wave’s real-time communication technology and features apply to Enterprise 2.0 collaboration and innovation.
According to Mashable, Google Wave is a real-time communication platform. It combines aspects of email, instant messaging, wikis, web chat, social networking, and project management to build one elegant, in-browser communication client. I like this. Integrating communication, networking and process oriented tools in one slick application is the key challenge for any collaborative platform developer. However, I do admit that the real-time aspect worries me a bit, and it’s clearly causing a lot of turbulence in the blogosphere to.
The integration of live aspects into Wave looks very attractive, but at the same time it creates a kind of complexity and inefficiency, also described by bloggers Steve Rubel, Robert Scoble, and Louis Gray. The point is that in this era of ‘attention crash’ professional knowledge workers are seeking exactly the opposite: simplicity and productivity. For the same reason, part of our R&D effort at CogniStreamer is focused on computing technology that reduces and simplifies collaboration processes in order to increase efficiency and performance.
But let’s be positive. Apart from this real-time issue, Google Wave introduces many interesting features. Playback for instance, where you can playback any part of the wave to see what was said – really helpful if you want to join a discussion that’s already halfway. On-the-fly auto-translation is another example. Most of our clients are global companies active in several continents all over the world. Internet got everybody connected, but for these companies, language remains an important natural barrier. In-line translation could be the answer to connect Chinese, Dutch or other native speakers in one collaborative platform.
On the Enterprise 2.0 relevancy scale however, the way Google Wave integrates Robots – automated participants within a wave – is very promising. Robots can modify information in waves, interact with users, communicate with others waves, and pull information from outside sources. But the most interesting aspect is that they behave like another person within a Google Wave conversation, except that they’re automated.
In my previous post I wrote that the use of persuasive technology in CogniStreamer is aimed at forging connections, improving communication, and enabling coordination. To achieve this, we are using agents (or bots) that monitor and analyze the collaborative activity to find persuasion windows, and then gently trigger individual users (our user groups) to connect, discuss or collaborate. One important principle is that the agents’ interaction should be perceived as friendly advice from fellow users. Google Wave sets a perfect example with bots interacting through the same communication and discussion channels used by the human users.
To answer the question, not all features introduced in Google Wave are probably equally relevant for Enterprise 2.0. (Or maybe they are, but some of us are just not ready for them yet.) The future will tell. But I’m convinced this is a big step in the right direction. Getting closer every day…






