Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Let's All Do the Wave ...

By | May 28, 2009, 3:59pm PDT

Summary: Ah, yes. Just what we need. And, oh, yes, it’s inevitable. An inbox that pulls together every email sent your way. Every instant message sent your way. Every image. Every social network message. Etc. If that’s what Google Wave does, fine. If not, fohgeddaboutit. What’s needed in this era of ever-expanding methods of communication is one simplified way of [...]

Ah, yes.

Just what we need. And, oh, yes, it’s inevitable.

An inbox that pulls together every email sent your way. Every instant message sent your way. Every image. Every social network message. Etc.

If that’s what Google Wave does, fine. If not, fohgeddaboutit.

What’s needed in this era of ever-expanding methods of communication is one simplified way of dealing with it all.


You’re probably not tired of checking your email and your LinkedIn page and your Facebook account and your Twitter stream for messages that matter. You are probably pining for more place to check on more pieces of communication from more people you don’t know around the world.

So, yes, we need now something beyond email that coalesces every type of communication sent our way. And allows us to respond effectively at any juncture.

But Google’s Wave, however cool, looks to me like a variant of a wiki. A way to get multiple parties to edit different types of content and see who said what at what point.

Doesn’t make me sit upright in my office chair.

Maybe it’s just me.

But what is really relevant now, in an era of media and communication overload, is a way to curtail the amount of media that needs to be commented on.

 
Will the wave prioritize communications — or just consolidate everything that is coming at a user?

The outfit that figures out a way to automate the sifting, editing and elevating of communications that matter — and that’s very subjective — will be the next Google.

Yes, we’ll need to pull together all forms of digital communications into one funnel and allow ad hoc commentary on same. Yet the fallout of allowing additional conversation on same will be to just increase stress on individual participants. There can be too much communication to keep up with.

The opportunity now is to automate the process of focusing attention, more than extending it.

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Topics

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld is editor-in-chief of Securities Industry News, as well as a long-time media, technology and business journalist.

Disclosure

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld has interests in two Web startups, which he cannot disclose until formally launched. They do not involve enterprise computing. He holds interests in technology companies only through mutual funds in which he has no say in their selection of investments. He has worked for Reed Elsevier PLC, Ziff Davis Media and the A.H. Belo Corporation.

Biography

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld is editor-in-chief of Securities Industry News, as well as a long-time media, technology and business journalist.

He experimented with online news delivery a quarter century ago, with a text-only online service called StarText at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in Texas.

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RE: Let's All Do the Wave ...
sbarnes@... 29th May 2009
>>The opportunity now is to automate the process of focusing attention, more than extending it.>>

There is only one way to do this. That is through consolidating all this information all in one place and allowing the recipient to decide, item by item, what is relevant, what should command his intellectual bandwidth and then give him the ability to organize and schedule his next actions as a result of that cognitive engagement. Anything else is merely a quest for the perpetual motion machine. Expectations as to what technology can achieve have gone beyond the bounds of all reasonable potential and Wave, to me, is just throwing more technology at a problem caused by technology in the first place. The in tray has never done out of fashion - nor will the Inbox. Get it all in your Inbox and triage it the old fashioned way. This is how humans are wired and the solution lies here. Sure technology can make it all hang together after the decision has been made, but it begins with a single decision undertaken within a tried and tested formula - namely - one at a time!

Stephen 4D Barnes
http://www.orla.biz
Got to love the bias and double standards here.
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Microsoft are nothing.
fr0thy2 29th May 2009
They only exist today because of anti-competitive activities.
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RE: Let's All Do the Wave ...
sbarnes@... 29th May 2009
>>The opportunity now is to automate the process of focusing attention, more than extending it.>>

There is only one way to do this. That is through consolidating all this information all in one place and allowing the recipient to decide, item by item, what is relevant, what should command his intellectual bandwidth and then give him the ability to organize and schedule his next actions as a result of that cognitive engagement. Anything else is merely a quest for the perpetual motion machine. Expectations as to what technology can achieve have gone beyond the bounds of all reasonable potential and Wave, to me, is just throwing more technology at a problem caused by technology in the first place. The in tray has never done out of fashion - nor will the Inbox. Get it all in your Inbox and triage it the old fashioned way. This is how humans are wired and the solution lies here. Sure technology can make it all hang together after the decision has been made, but it begins with a single decision undertaken within a tried and tested formula - namely - one at a time!

Stephen 4D Barnes
http://www.orla.biz

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