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Working in the Cloud, by Google

Simon Capel is Google’s Enterprise Sales Manager for Australia and New Zealand and is a man with a vision – for people to work in the cloud. What does that mean? Work anywhere, using any computer, securely access what you need and collaborate in real time. Why is this important? It changes the way we do business and, importantly, changes our expectations.

Simon Capel Presentation on Leveraging the Google Cloud

Working in the cloud for business uses Google Aps which delivers tools (like word processing, spreadsheets) through a web browser (think Internet Explorer, Firefox, and the new player, Google Chrome), tailored specifically to the user, and Google want companies to ‘get it’.  The business version is backed up with a service level agreement and support – Google are doing business.

Why is this different from what we have already?  It allows secure, easy collaboration and information sharing.  It’s not tied to fiddly accessing data through an intranet.  Data is stored on their servers – pointing to lower IT costs and lots of space (no more having to empty your inbox before another message can come in). Large government organisations (think city of Los Angeles), companies, as well as Universities have started using the cloud – my guess is they chose to do so because of ease of use, the collaborative tools offered and that it has the potential to save money.

Simon’s presentation is Google’s vision of the cloud changing the way we do business, and play.

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Sydneysiders on RIP Google Wave May 2009 – Dec 2010

Google wave is to be no more, the Google team in Sydney, having put a lot of effort into an innovative new product will see the technology developed in a different way.  What happened?  Wave had some internal competition from Google Buzz, and users were having to get used to two very different ways of communicating.  And in both cases you need someone to communicate with. A very active Sydney Wave user group dived into the technology, visited Google HQ and began to experiment.  Here are some of their discussions on hearing the news but first, from the Google blog:

… Wave has not seen the user adoption we would have liked. We don’t plan to continue developing Wave as a standalone product, but we will maintain the site at least through the end of the year and extend the technology for use in other Google projects. The central parts of the code, as well as the protocols that have driven many of Wave’s innovations, like drag-and-drop and character-by-character live typing, are already available as open source, so customers and partners can continue the innovation we began. In addition, we will work on tools so that users can easily “liberate” their content from Wave.

Posted by Urs Hölzle, Senior Vice President, Operations & Google Fellow

I didn’t know you could be a Google Fellow! But that aside, here are comments from the wave user group in Sydney on their experience with using wave and interacting with the Google Wave team. The discussion took place on facebook, but some of the points raised are so pertinent I wanted to post them here. I agree with Tony’s comment:

Tony2 150x150 Sydneysiders on RIP Google Wave May 2009   Dec 2010 Tony Cosentino

It’s funny, I was at a gathering the night before the announcement and when wave came up in conversation someone said ‘does anyone even use it?’ Most agreed not.

I made a statement that I believed they had rolled out BUZZ and WAVE the wrong way around. I think WAVE should have been offered to all gmail users from the beginning to allow a critical mass to use and understand it. It was so hard to try putting groups together in the beginning with limited invites it all became like a secret cult with little documentation.

I feel for Gina Trapani who wrote the ‘Complete Google Wave Guide’ as an ongoing project. And also the programmers we have met at google wave meeting putting a lot of time and money to develop wave tools. No One in google lost their jobs over it.

I am also glad I hadn’t put anything really critical on wave that I was relying on as a long term repository.

Frances Jones 150x150 Sydneysiders on RIP Google Wave May 2009   Dec 2010 Frances Jones

What I appreciated about Wave was that Lars, Jens & co created it in Sydney and I will always admire them as entrepreneurs. Heck, Lars even came to see us speak at the User Group. Many of the nscm crowd got together at Google HQ because of it. It created positives for us.

Google spent I don’t know how many $millions on Wave which Sydney benefitted from. Positives all round for us I’d say.

Tony Hollingsworth Sydneysiders on RIP Google Wave May 2009   Dec 2010 Tony Hollingsworth

Spot on Frances – the community building and support that occurred remains.

For example, some memories include:
http://gwsug.eventbrite.com/ – the informal user groups where you can see the range of people interested.

http://friendfeed.com/search?q=%23gwsug – we coined the hastag #gwsug for Google Wave Sydney User Group and can enjoy the history via FriendFeed, including the photos of the community.

Finally your teriffic blog posts Frances capturing the initial excitement and promise of Wave:

First impressions of Google Wave, An Australian Perspective
Innovation according to Goovle Wave co-creator Lars Rasmussen

These guys (and many others) really were experienced on wave and their comments, to me at least, say a lot.

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What is my experience of the iPad so far

Duck billed platypus What is my experience of the iPad so farThe iPad is neither fish nor fowl.  It’s not a phone, it’s not a laptop. Its useful but fiddly.

Leaving the laptop behind I took the iPad away for a weekend when visiting family – things I had to work on were a slide presentation for Monday morning, emails, along with notes to write and verify by using the internet. What was Great, what was Average, and what was Pants?

Great

INSTA-connection.  Bus, plane, 10 mins at a cafe.  There’s no ‘firing up’ your computer.  Switch on. You’re connected

LOADS of battery power for the plane.ipad image manipulation1 What is my experience of the iPad so far

I can move images around with a swivel of my fingers, whether in pages (word document) or on slides.  It’s like magic.

Internet connection and gmail is great to use. So far hasn’t ever not been able to connect.

Skype – sound quality is fantastic and it’s not even made officially for the iPad yet

Light, easy to transport (in comparison to taking my laptop everywhere), great for showing presentations.

Reading – it’s my first experience of reading a book on a computer.  I’m addicted.

I can play on it – lots of fun apps to brows and go ‘ooooh look at that’ – free.

Average

You can only work on one thing at a time – I’m guessing that’s a first generation thing. So there’s a lot of flipping back and forth but things open exactly where you left off and they open quickly.

No camera (some may say that’s a good thing).

ipad keyboard What is my experience of the iPad so farWriting and taking notes – is done via typing on a keyboard on the screen.  It’s slower than using a mouse and keyboard but on the plus side you don’t have to take them with you.

Auto-correct – you need it more because of the keyboard set up and when it works great, when it corrects wrongly it’s a pain (see lack of arrow and delete keys below).

Slide and document fonts are not as extensive as on laptop.

Pants

Typing, moving things around are all done with your fingers (as opposed to keyboard and mouse).  It’s Fiddly if you’re not used to Mac movements on an iPhone (which I’m not) I kept selecting the wrong thing, deleting when trying to paste – with practice and I suspect that will get easier, and the developers may also make it easier.

No delete key and no arrow keys. Very annoying.  You have to press on a word, get the curser in exactly the right place and then fiddle to edit it.

Because of the ‘finger editing’ – working on documents and presentations is Slow.

Social sites – I share a lot of things from websites.  Sharing urls on facebook and twitter is a few too many clicks yet.  Not convenient or easy.  Again, suspect it’s a first generation thing.

Tried to edit a wordpress blog – wouldn’t show me the html code.

Overall

I can’t easily do on an iPad everything I would do on a laptop, but I can do the majority of things.  Am I glad I’ve got one – very. Main things are small, transportable and I love the INSTA-connect, no fuss, no hassle, and I’m online with all my work software to hand. Also, I have books, music all within a touch of a finger, for some reason this works psychologically for me better than on the laptop.

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How to Skype from iPad

Skyping from an iPad is Easy, and the sound quality much better than from my laptop. How do you get it: Log into iTunes, go to the App store, search for skype, download.

At present it’s voice only, but excellent quality.  It was very useful to be able to make the skype call on the iPad while I worked on the laptop.

skype on ipad1 How to Skype from iPad

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Now What – The iPad, the TEGA tablet, does it change things

CNN: ‘If you want to buy a consumer-friendly tablet computer today and you don’t want to purchase Apple’s iPad, you’re pretty much out of luck.

The iPad currently has no real competitors, and the touch-screen computer is so far ahead of the market that it has some gadget makers running back to the drawing boards, according to technology industry analysts.

“In essence, what Apple has done is created a wake-up call to the rest of the industry — that they need to look at what they’re offering,” said David Daoud, research director for the firm IDC. “They raised the bar significantly.”

Can anyone compete?  A friend asked me to write about the TEGA Tablet which was about the same size as an iPad and comes with a lot of functionality. So here it is along with its spec for the more technically minded:

tegatech tega 3g w7p 300x190 Now What   The iPad, the TEGA tablet, does it change things

Tegatech TEGA 3G Touch Tablet PC specification sheet 21 Now What   The iPad, the TEGA tablet, does it change things

The CNN article is right – the iPad has raised the bar, I like the competition it is producing – having played with it at a recent Publisher’s Australia event which demonstrated the iPad for publishers it is a game changer as far as technology and how people are going to access and publish information. Maybe the laptop will disappear altogether as more products like the iPad, and the TEGA tablet are produced,  I don’t know, but what is good is that with new technology comes new ways not only of doing things but of thinking and that’s the bit that excites me.

(for more on the iPad, TEGA Tablet and Kindle you might want to check out Sean Carmody’s blog post at the Stubborn Mule: The Re-birth of the Tablet).

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The Medieval Helpdesk

Having had a few interesting skirmishes with new software recently, this seemed very apt.

pixel The Medieval Helpdesk
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