Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by OtherShrezzing 364 days ago
I had exactly the same experience. I was at university, and around 20% of students on my course had access to Wave, which functionally meant 0% of students could use it.

“An app to collaborate on, but nobody to collaborate with” has to be the most economically destructive product rollout I’ve ever seen.

1 comments

Does anyone know why this was? Was the compute resource too scarce at the time? Seems hard to believe of Google even as I type it.
GMail was still fresh at the time, and it rolled out in a similar manner, being invite-only at first. I think they didn't think about it very much, and just did the same thing.
But email was already interoperable. GMail offered a nice interface, lots of storage, and a good spam filter, but otherwise it was just email. You didn't need to have friends with it to benefit from it.

Having used Wave, it was very taxing on low-end computers, so I never ended up using the fancier features - we used it for a group live-watch of LOST every week with several other friends.