Everyone and their brother is trying to figure out how Google Wave is changing the game (besides trying to get invited to the darn thing). Of course, many people are taking a look at perhaps how it can help us in ministry specifically.
Brian Barela, as shown in the screencast above, shows a quick example of how he’s used it and some of the pros/cons of his experience so far.
Thanks Brian for testing the waters!
How have you guys seen Google Wave useful?
Justin Piercy says
Sweet. I've been using it to coordinate a creative volunteer team involved in various service programming elements. Really handy across the board, especially considring many of the people on the creative team are widespread and near impossible to get in the room at the same time, but are also all very active online.
Some specific uses that I've found have been brainstorming and sharing graphic and video concepts for upcoming series, creation of creative service elements, strategic music selection and task delegation.
It's worked really well for our creative SPD team so far and I can't wait to implement it more widely across our ministry.
Brian Barela says
hey justin that's another key way i've been using it; it's really great at having slowly developing conversations with people from different locations.
Jim says
i've got a few partners,clients,and friends and still processing …it's not if, but when i'll start using it.
sblumer says
we've used it for planning as well. unlike email, it's all in one place and you don't have a long list of emails, plus if you have an idea after the talk, you can still add it.
the problem is that if you don't remember to keep google wave open, you don't see or participate in the discussion.
being able to add files and pics is also helpful, makes sharing financial reports, etc in one place pretty nice.
we'll see if it's really useful after the preview is over and the "hype" subsides.
room1012 says
The Wave is great. We've been using it for the initial planning stages and brainstorming. One of us throws an idea out there, and people can quickly comment or respond to each part. When I sign back in, I can easily see new feedback, and there's no guessing what part of ur original message they're responding to. Way faster than email!
i agree with sblumer's comment, it'd be nice if they sent an email or tweet to u when there's new content in a Wave.
dewde says
I predict a POP/IMAP gadget. Then google wave will be the app you open for email, and not gmail/yahoo/etc. All waves and email will be centralized there.
I also predict rich clients for Wave. Think MS Outlook or Apple Mail for Wave. A central messaging hub for threaded conversations, IMs, Tweets, and emails.
Convergence. It's only a matter of time.
peace | dewde
stephenbateman says
I love all the things you're saying.
Steve Knight says
A group of us have been using Google Wave to do collaborative planning for Emergent Village communications (revamping the @emergentvillage Twitter, EV blog/website, etc.). Other technologies exist for this kind of collaborative discussion, but Google Wave (because of it's real-time "chat"-like function) takes it to another level and makes it feel more "immediate" and exciting. So far that's been the only real use I've seen for Google Wave, but it's working well for this kind of "team" approach.
Kyle Reed says
I have used it for sharing ideas, having small group discussion, working on graphics, and sharing information about an idea.
Vin Thomas says
I have been using Google Wave with some friends to discuss our roadtrip to the Denver A29 Bootcamp in May. It's been great for that. Although, I think Wave has a long way to go before it's really useful.
One thing that bothers me is that I am not notified in my gmail that there is a new wave message. It would be nice if there was some way to turn that feature on. There are virtually no "settings" for Wave.
Alive Church says
We are using to coordinating live broadcasts on our multi-site and web campuses campuses.
Would like an email reminder of new additions to the wavelettes.
dannyjbixby says
There's a FF addon that works very well for gwave notifications.
It's not email, but it's something.
stephenbateman says
Our group is working towards going Wave. it's frustrating that as far as I can tell, you can't set notifications to email, so I always forget about wave and don't respond quickly. I guess I should just remember.
Jeff says
If you use Chrome as your browser there is a Wave Notifier extension you can use, which has come in handy for me. granted this only works if you are camped out in front of your computer…
andydarnell says
I feel lost. I think I'll just stick with IE5.5 🙂
David Miller says
So far I haven't figured out what to do with it. I see it's potential but that's where it stops.
@adamrshields says
Good cross promotion 🙂
Ron Tuffin says
Ok so I can’t see the video because of some Nazi inspired proxy settings here at the office (yes it is lunchtime here).
But I do have 25 google wave invites to give away, and if, like the article suggests, there are many people wanting just tweet me at @RonTuffin and I can pop an invite in your direction.
Matt Harrell says
We're certainly checking it out for MemberHub.com. It seems possible that we could replace a hub with just a Wave. But of course with our beautiful UI on top!
Jeff says
I have a whole bunch of Wave invites to give away if anybody wants one. I am having a hard time giving these things away, it almost seems like the Wave bubble has burst among the people I know.
If you are interested in an invite send me a message at jeff [–at–] thebristows.com
@fenner3 says
We have been using googlewave as a Q&A platform. Check out the link if your interested: http://www.chrisfenner.com/2009/12/google-wave/
human3rror says
whoa, thanks for this!
dannyjbixby says
That's pretty awesome!