Dear all,

I've not found any better place to write, so I'm trying here.

In short: aren't there any chances that Google Wave could remain
living zombie the same way Google Notebook is? Notebook is also
stagnant, abandoned, but wasn't killed (which is good for all faithful
users like me). You say that Wave haven't attracted as many users as
expected, but it doesn't mean it attracted no-one!

For a long time I also haven't found the use for it. Last month it
changed. One of my coworker, which is responsible for very
sophisticated project (implementing large scale Warehouse Management
System with production and 3rd party logistics and integrating with
ERP, for the curious) for several sites, came to me for help.

As he shown me, his duties involve amazing number of sophisticated
tasks, all of which are discussed for a few days mostly by email, and
consist mostly of reply to reply to a previous reply to a forwarded
message in a group of people. That creates stunning number of messages
and knowledge. Coordinating these is impossible. People often respond
to obsolete messages, because email doesn't have enough context
available (I mean in a very long message there are chances somebody
just put a sentence in the place nobody will notice). Typical long-
living message is a colorful mess of random sentences. Same for groups
and spreadsheets. Lack of proper tool makes people invent new
attachments and put even more facts there. Thus there are problems
arranging things. Knowledge is scattered and there's no single place
that would contain everything. Decisions are often made based on
outdated or partial information.

So we looked for alternatives (Google based) and tried documents,
spreadsheets and groups. But NONE OF THEM worked. Our problem was
simply out of their domain. Only product that worked was Google Wave.
It has the ability to comment on comment on comment on each chosen
sentence, by just right-clicking, without risk of losing context,
allowing quickly locate required contents. If the issue gets too long,
one click can extract it to a new wave, which then grows by itself. IT
REALLY WORKS! We tested it and it's PERFECT! Not to mention polls and
other useful tools!

Then we've read that Google is most probably pulling the plug next
year. That's sad. Wouldn't it work if you kept Wave running but not
supported, just like Notebook?

What is the problem with Wave alternatives? They are simply not as
good as Wave!

Our last hope is you, Dear Google.

Thanks for your patience.
chojrak

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