Google Wave is a collaborative online tool that is used for communicating between one another. Check out wave.google.com for more information.
You can sign up to get a Google Wave invite over at wave.google.com, if you click on the link at the bottom to request an invite.Alternatively, you can ask your friends who already have google wave if they have any invites.Only people who were sent an invite by Google (not another wave user) will be able to send invites. They get 8 invites each to send out.It takes around 2-3 days for an invite to be sent, as google are manually sending them.
Google Wave released an invitation-only preview, that started on September 30th 2009. The full release was expected in late 2009, but has now been delayed to 2010.
My opinion is that people won't use it because they think it's much easier to use regular Google. In addition, some people won't have the time to do "google wave".
The problem was that Google Wave launched and there was more bark than bite; a lot of 'buzz' but not enough practical use for the regular user to comprehend. So it was misunderstood as a failed product; then again, it might be that it just wasn't used to it's full capacity because what do most regular users need such a tool for? The second 'wave' of Google Wave should hopefully do better since the Wave team is lobbying to get it integrated into other Google apps like Docs and email, the places where regular users might find it more useful and practical.
According to an article in TechCrunch on August 4, 2010:Maybe it was just ahead of its time. Or maybe there were just too many features to ever allow it to be defined properly, but Google is saying today that they are going to stop any further development of Google Wave.(See the Related link for the full article.)
Look up sine wave on Google to see a picture.
Google Labs was a webpage that Google used to demonstrate new Google projects. The page allowed the public to test and try new products as they were developed. Some of the products that have been part of Google Labs include Gmail, Google Calendar and Google Wave.
Only if more people start using it. I did envisage it would be successful, but it is not. Google announced that they will shut it down by the end of 2010. I was very passionate about it, particularly the concept of Wave and the cool real-time collaborative editing function supported by the so-called operational transformation technique. Quite a few systems also claimed that they have used the same technique, the most impressive one being Codoxword (http://www.codoxware.com), a MS Word plugin that allows real-time collaborative editing of a Word document. Since Google also has this technique, I wish Google will use it in their future Google Docs so that the spirit of Google Wave can be inherited.
The voltage and current are delivered in a sine wave that goes positive and then negative at 60 cycles per second. Google sine wave to see what a sine wave looks like.
Google Wave is a platform for collaborating on projects or events planning with people you know. It's a way to draft, write, store files, and communicate all in the same application. It's a wiki with chat, it's a document with file inclusion. Google Buzz is 'Google's approach to sharing.' It's a way to share your favorite content, your messages, your status updates, your words, you conversations all in the same application - from within your Gmail or on your phone.
Yes there was! I'm studying out it now. Google Images show good photos of the experience! Check it out :-)
The vertical distance between trough and crest is called the height of the wave. While the crest is the highest point of a wave, the trough is the lowest point.Are you talking about waves? That simply depends on the frequency of the wave; crest and trough are just terms given to sections of waves. The crest is the top of the wave, and the trough is the bottom.It's the amplitude. Like on the drawn parts of a transverse wave. You can look it up on Google images.wave hight