Just to be devil's advocate, I suppose the idea is that if you can
integrate all of your interruptions into one neat application they can
be managed with less effort.
I wouldn't really know though, as I work for a bank where all social
sites are blocked, including personal email, so all this waving and
tweeting would have to fit into my spare time, what there is of it. I
always assumed it was for students and people who work in media.
WIlliam Robertson
-----Original message-----
From: Dennis Williams
Date: 12/2/10 17:34
This brings up a point of curiosity for me. To succeed as a DBA
requires a bit of focus. The more interruptions you receive, the harder
it is to perform DBA tasks without error. So when new stuff like Google
Wave comes along my reaction is "great, I should sign up for more
interruptions". Is that reasonable or am I just getting to be
a curmudgeon?
Dennis Williams
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 11:08 AM, Christoph <cruepprich@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Well,
Wave is still in beta, so naturally there are still some bugs. I too
wish there would be gmail notifications whenever waves get updated. I
think, however, there may be a gadget for that.
Voice seems to integrate nicely into gmail for me. Getting
text versions of voicemails is certainly nice.
As for buzz, well, it seems to be a twitter clone. Not sure of
any good uses for it.
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 10:57 AM, Thomas
Roach <troach@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
My biggest gripe about wave and voice was that it did not
seem to integrate with gmail. Not sure if I am doing it wrong, but it
was like I had to add users separately outside of my gmail address
book. Like it was a whole new service so I didn't bother to try and
leverage it.
Anyone find a way? is it integrated better now since buzz?
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 11:30 AM,
Christoph <cruepprich@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Hi
all,
I would like to know if any of you are using Google
Wave, and if so, how.
Cheers,
Christoph
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