Skip to main content

Opinion: Google's wave drowns the bling in Microsoft's Bing -...

Popularity Report

Total Popularity Score: 0

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Rank

Bookmark History

Public Sticky notes

The browser battle renewed today

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Microsoft's hand may have been moved by the launch of Wolfram|Alpha

Highlighted by grahamperrin

much promise in connecting people to knowledge

Highlighted by grahamperrin

the first round clearly goes to Wave

Highlighted by grahamperrin

collaborative technology that blurs the lines between email, wiki, SMS and Twitter

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Wave integrates many of the features of disparate systems in common use

Highlighted by grahamperrin

application programming interfaces would make it easier for third-parties to customise web applications

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Microsoft's Bing, launched under the NineMSN banner in Australia

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Go offline and the wave data stayed with you

Highlighted by grahamperrin

ultimately it would mean a user could save all their work in the browser and dump it on the intertubes when they go back online

Highlighted by grahamperrin

waves worked best on standards-compliant, Webkit browsers

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Mozilla

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Safari

Highlighted by grahamperrin

Chrome

Highlighted by grahamperrin

emails (which could be translated between languages in real time) to a wave user

Highlighted by grahamperrin

wave that was turned back into an e-mail

Highlighted by grahamperrin

The same held true for instant messages and tweets

Highlighted by grahamperrin

getting people to change their rusted-on habits

Highlighted by grahamperrin

a shift from discrete applications to just one to handle all communications

Highlighted by grahamperrin

on 2009-05-29 by grahamperrin

This is almost certainly too much for me to swallow.

on 2009-05-29 by grahamperrin

I like discrete applications.

Readers (1)