Showing posts with label software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label software. Show all posts

5.19.2010

Google Wave for everyone!




You can now get Google Wave without an invitation, Google announced today. If you've got a Google sign-in (such as the one you use for GMail) you'll be able to roll right into (and through) Wave's login page.

So what is Wave? Well, I don't really know since I just signed up. But it turns out that people were asking similar questions last year when the product was first rolled out:

[Google's introduction of Wave] failed to answer perhaps the fundamental question, “what do we do with it right now?,” developer Lars Rasmussen tells us. ”That’s because we weren’t sure,” he admits. People would load it up and get overwhelmed or confused. “But we know that now — it’s about groups of people adopting Wave,” he says.

Over the past year of watching usage, Rasmussen’s team concluded that the “sweet spot” for Wave is group collaboration. While these days, most sexy new services are some variety of social network where people share things, Wave is about “people getting together to get work done,” he says. And that’s the market Wave now intends to go squarely after. (via TechCrunch)
OK, so there is a bunch of information out there from Google and others describing what Wave is and how it works. I liked this video as an introduction.

Update: You may also want to check out this article in Lifehacker, linked to in previous post about Google Wave by Sara Loree.

3.18.2010

Kindle for Mac Now Available

Amazon has finally launched its Kindle app for Mac. It's available for Intel-based machines only, and Mac OS X 10.5 and above. It's a free download. You will still have to buy your books.


Read more here: Kindle for Mac

12.04.2009

Prezi - presentation software without slides(!)

I came across Prezi recently when browsing the eLearning//Don't Waste Your Time blog feed in my Google Reader subscriptions. The author of that blog took Prezi on a test run by composing a "prezi" about his iPhone. It seems like a pretty cool tool for adding some spice to your presentations, and its being web-based may add some convenience. I haven't tried it yet, but the designers claim you can learn to use it in ten minutes. Tutorials are available at the Prezi website.

Below is a sample Prezi presentation.