I was surprised to see how many public Wave discussions related to newspapers I found, once I'd figured out how to search for such things. See this L.A. Times article, How Google Wave could transform journalism, and other links below.
Wave is part e-mail, Wiki, chat, file-sharing and bulletin board. Once you're in, you can search for public Waves (ripples? currents? tides?) such as the daily ones the Chicago RedEye is running. I joined a Wave discussion of ideas for college media projects, which I'll share with Radford students as I get them invited. It already had a few dozen contributors.
Just after my invitation arrived (thanks to Mich Sineath at AEJMC), I stumbled on this article, which suggests that not having a ready-built community to wave with is a common complaint: What Users Like/Dislike About Google Wave along with this, Why Google Wave sucks, and why you will use it anyway
However, there are already 30 people in my GMail "contact" list with Wave accounts. On the other hand, I could say "only 30," since my contact list has more than 1,000 e-mail addresses. I wonder how many of them are in the same boat I'm in: "Intriguing new tool, but no time to use it right now."
My Wave account gives me eight invitations to send, and I'll divide them evenly between students and faculty. I'll seed some invites in my Web production classes next week and next semester, chain-letter style (invite one student, who can invite another, etc.), and do the same with our school website committee, then see if we can use it for a virtual meetings. I'm also intrigued by a plug-in called Bloggy that lets you post a conversation from Wave to a blog like this one... but I'll save that for later.
"Bloggy"? I see there are also "Embeddy," "Tweety" and "Trendy."
I wonder if someone has created a "Cutesy," but that might be redundant.
Here's the first batch of Wave links from my bookmark list:
- How Google Wave is Changing the News
- Chicago RedEye does daily waves
- LA Times: How Google Wave could transform journalism
- Google Wave... journalistic tool?
- 9 Ways to Use Google Wave (in education)
- NYTimes Bits Blog tags for Google Wave
- Top 6 Game-Changing Features, Complete Guide and More (Mashable)
- Wave gadgets tutorial
- Tutorial (10 videos) at Butterscotch.com
- Google's Long Video (80 minutes?!) about Wave
- Google's shorter video on ways to use Wave