Posts Tagged ‘Google Waves’

Most Important Google Wave Commands

By On 2009/12/23 | 4 Comments

How can you work with Google wave? Well, in my Previous Post( How To use Google Wave?) I had discussed about Google Wave in much summarized way. To continue from there I am going to list out some important commands that can help you working with Google waves.

1) Search Commands:

This is a quick guide to the operators and restricts supported by wave search  Keywords.
1) about:[keyword] — To find waves which have [keyword] occurring anywhere.
2) title:[keyword] — To find waves which have [keyword] in the title.
3) caption:[keyword] —To find waves which have an attachment where [keyword] occurs in the Caption.

2) Status Commands:

1) is:read —To find all read waves.
2) is:unread —To find all unread waves.
Note: you cannot currently do a search like “-is:read” by itself and get reliable results due to an outstanding restriction on mega-store queries.
3) is:mute — To find all muted waves.
4) is:unmute — To find all waves not muted.
5) is:active — To Find Waves currently the same as is:unread.
6) is:note — To find all waves which have you as the only participant and contributor.
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How to use Google Wave?

By On 2009/12/21 | 4 Comments

How you can use Google wave and how it can be useful for you in your daily life communicating with your friends, colleagues and family members. Google Wave is yet another innovation by Google to involve people with internet and revolutionized the social web in today’s date.
You may be wondering what exactly Google Wave is? And is it really easy and useful to the common users. Well I find it difficult to answer when I just started, but now I think it is one place where you can do many things like work, talk, communicate, find friends, make Friends etc what else I need. Nothing much I want in the cyber world of Social networking.

What is a wave?
A wave is equal parts conversation and document. People can communicate and work together with richly formatted text, photos, videos, maps, and more.
A wave is shared. Any participant can reply anywhere in the message, edit the content and add participants at any point in the process. Then playback lets anyone rewind the wave to see who said what and when.
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