They first founded Google Maps technology and now after 2 years they are back with Google Wave!
The Rasmussen brothers (Lars and Jens) who founded Where 2 Tech, which was acquired by Google in 2004 and became Google Maps. On 28 May 2009, Rasmussen brothers previewed Google Wave, a Web-based service that combines aspects of e-mail, instant messaging, real-time collaboration and document processing into a unified user experience
With Wave, Google seeks to change fundamentally the way people communicate by turning the Web into an integrated, real-time, multiway medium. Thus, Google has undertaken a complex challenge, which earlier distributed collaboration systems, from Internet newsgroups to Lotus Notes and Groove, have addressed with varying degrees of success. Wave combines a broad suite of applications, a protocol that independent developers can use to build interoperable Wave servers, and a platform that allows developers to add new processing logic to Wave content and to embed Wave functions in external Web sites. Implementing the full Wave vision requires innovations in distributed-computing algorithms, in scalable keystroke-level "push" communications, in protocol design, and in server infrastructure and data repositories.
Google will release major portions of Wave, including the protocol and a reference implementation, under the "most liberal" open-source license to drive adoption of Wave by independent developers and make it part of the Internet infrastructure. Wave also includes innovations in technology, user experience and business model, which can drive adoption by individual consumers. However, several inhibitors will keep Wave from affecting the enterprise soon:
- The large aggregation of features, which can daunt users
- Dependence on the latest Web browser technologies
- Likely overlap with multiple areas in an enterprise’s IT environment
Wave will not challenge Lotus Notes, Microsoft Exchange or Microsoft Office SharePoint Server for five to 10 years, if it ever does. Nevertheless, Wave will create both competition and opportunity for other players in the market. Wave shows that workplace offerings will eventually have to combine Internet standards and a decentralized, federated architecture. Whether or not Wave ultimately succeeds, the Web will win.