Thank you Peter, Treijkaz and Rick for your responds. My way of using Wave.
I really want to have all communication at one place, so also mIRC. I am using mIRC alot. This is how i see to implent my day. Google wave in the morning pioritising and answering high piority waves 1hour tops. And at the end of the day around 17:00 second time google wave one hour. That it with the communication. The rest of the day working on projects/reading/studying. (all the communication sociale community/emails/mIRC's/phonecalls) The power of google is the search option. You really can search fast in your gmail arcief and internet plus i like the advertensing. We brainstorm alot in IRC channels and it is a communication section. But without a good search, i never search back in mIRC. I should to learn from the discussion. So for me it is A+B+C=D formule. Well if your can implent mIRC into Google wave and use the google wave stylo to discuss. It will be for the Google wave user better use of mIRC, because you will get clearer about the subject and main arguments. And you don't need to repeat yourself because you can find the dicussion faster. I was thinking about if the email would be invented now what would it be? If internet communication would be invented now what would it be..... You guys got nice solution about it and also with the mIRC. On Sep 2, 6:20 pm, ricksevans <[email protected]> wrote: > mIRC is a popular commercial implementation of an Internet Relay Chat > (IRC) CLIENT; i.e., mIRC is an application that you buy. There are > several "brands" of IRC client applications (many are free). Google > "IRC client" to see a list of them. > > IRC client applications use the IRC client protocol to participate in > chats hosted on IRC servers. > The official specification for the IRC Client Protocol is found here: > http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2812 > > IFAIK, a moderately skilled programmer should to be able to implement > a working IRC client, for example, as a Google Wave gadget. > > IRC is a relatively lightweight protocol on the client side. Bandwidth > should not be an issue. > > -------- > > If on the other hand you want to use a generic IRC client as a Google > Wave client, then no you cannot. > > IRC clients implement the IRC protocol, not the Google Wave protocols. > > Also, I think you are missing the point of Google Wave. The Google > Wave client is an extensive client application that implements > (combines) a lot of nifty Graphical User Interface elements, the > "bling" as you call it. Without those elements, most of the benefits > of Google Wave (beyond IRC) are lost. > > For example, IRC clients list each message (blip) in the sequential > order as they were received on the host, not grouped by wavelets > (threads) as in Wave. IRC has no mechanism for tracking the > relationship between individual messages. (IRC channels are more > similar to Waves, not Wavelets as you suggest.) > > Even if you could, using a text-based IRC client for interacting with > a Wave would be analogous to editing a spreadsheet with a text editor. > You could do it... but why ... you loose all the power provided by the > better tool. > > ------- > However the gist of your snide little comment is correct, in that > Google Wave, as well as IM, Twitter, and other message technologies, > are a the technical descendants of IRC. IRC is their daddy. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google Wave API" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/google-wave-api?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
