So I've heard a lot about Google Wave recently, mostly as I've been getting google alerts about cyberinfrastructure, metadata, and cloud computing and trying to view those through the lens of potential effects on higher education and higher education administration specifically. I'm reading a lot about e-archives and open access and scholarly
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but maybe it really is the most amazing thing ever.
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I think google wave is "the wave of the future" but it's too much to figure out right now without having tried it. I'm not sure what I'd use it for but I like where they're going. The invite thing is so all their servers don't crash and at the same time they can build up excitement.
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I think that the faculty I've talked with about tech shifts are looking a little askance at things like online courses and seeing it as missing out on much of what goes on in the classroom (and outside it) in more personal interaction with students. I don't know who had the biggest impact on you at ND, but I can certainly remember you talking about particular courses, like your Arthurian Literature one. Can you see what you are describing as adding to that "deeper end" of your own educational experience?
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Think of it as an interactive chatroom, of sorts. I can see it being a good collaborative tool, but I have a hard time picturing its usefulness in education, other than online course discussion.
Right now you need an invite because, as far as I can tell, it's not really on the "cloud" and is slow as hell. They're carefully scaling the severs with each batch of invites that go out to make sure that it doesn't break. (I already had a wave "explode" on me -- that's their technical term.) If I get another round of invites, I'd be more than happy to send one to you.
* I'm pretty sure I got an early invite because of the poem I attached with my invite request: Roses are red / Violets are blue / Bing really ( ... )
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