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This is my personal blog and anything I write here in no way reflects the opinion of Cisco Systems, my employer. If it does, it is only by pure coincidence :) Nothing here constitutes investment advice either, so you can't sue me.

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    I'm Dumping My Blog for Google Wave 

    IStock_000001136467XSmall  When I first started blogging in 2006 or so, I loved the idea of being able to have conversations with people all over the world, many of whom I didn't even know existed.  It's served me really well in that respect, I've met a ton of people and developed my most important online social network.  I have several relationships in the real world that developed because of blogs.

    Then Twitter came along, and was all real-timey and stuff.  It's fun.  It feels like a cocktail party.  I can blurt out things that I think would make funny fortune cookies and there's an audience for that I guess.  But in terms of content it was a real lightweight compared to blogs, the medium is just too constraining.  At its core Twitter is a 140-character message bus, and there are lots of things lacking there for heavy-duty collaboration to happen.

    Next came Facebook, which allowed me to find a lot of people but not necessarily the ones I wanted to have technical conversations with.  It's also completely ungeared towards anything longer than a sentence or two, the commenting system resembles a car with just an engine and a frame and a steering wheel.  Also not suited to hard-core collaboration of any kind.

    Over time the collaboration model on blogs got better with the introduction of commenting systems like Disqus (although I still don't like the fact that I rely on them 100% to safeguard those comments).  But it never really changed much, we always had blogs and RSS to distribute and comment on meatier content.

    But then, this year, came Wave.  And I fell head over heels in love with it.

    Continue reading "I'm Dumping My Blog for Google Wave" Continue reading this post

    The Usefulness of Waves Over Time 

    As I continue to use and experiment with Wave, I keep coming up with interesting little questions and thoughts about where this is all headed.

    (By the way, this is also being published as a Wave, so if you're on it you can follow along here.  The waves seem to be much more interactive so I'd highly recommend it.  If you need an invite let me know, I have a few.)

    Continue reading "The Usefulness of Waves Over Time" Continue reading this post