About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 51. Chapters: Netscape Communicator, Kazaa, MacPaint, Apache Wave, Registrar, Macsyma, The Major BBS, DriveSpace, AppleWorks, MacWrite, DVD Shrink, Macromedia HomeSite, Norton Commander, Norton AntiBot, CherryOS, Avid Elastic Reality, Adobe GoLive, Adobe ImageReady, GNU Oleo, MultiFinder, CERN httpd, Nvu, Netscape 6, Sonique, PartitionMagic, Base4, System Safety Monitor, OpenCD, SpaceMonger, MacPublisher, MediaBrowser, Adobe PageMill, Win4Lin, Winpooch, Minnesota Internet Users Essential Tool, XMule, WriteNow, MuPAD, MacProject, Netscape Messenger 9, Double Tools for DoubleSpace, Macromedia xRes, Internet in a Box, Ipchains, MacDraw, SuperPaint, FIPS, Adobe Persuasion, BBEdit Lite, CricketPaint, Firestarter, SMART Information Retrieval System, Derive, PC-Talk, FullPaint, MacTerminal, QtParted, LMule, Office Automation Software, Claris Homepage, XploRe, DirectX Media, ScriptX, AOLpress, Butler SQL, Adobe PhotoDeluxe, MuMATH, X.desktop, CA-Cricket Presents, Timeworks Publisher, Adobe Streamline, Carbon Copy. Excerpt: Apache Wave is a software framework centered on online real-time collaborative editing, originally developed by Google as Google Wave. It was first announced at the Google I/O conference on May 27, 2009. Google Wave is a web-based computing platform and communications protocol, designed to merge key features of media like e-mail, instant messaging, wikis, and social networking. Communications using the system can be synchronous and/or asynchronous, depending on the preference of individual users. Software extensions provide contextual spelling/grammar checking, automated translation among 40 languages, and numerous other features. Initially released only to developers, a preview release of Google Wave was extended to 100,000 users in September 2009, each allowed to invite additional users. Google accepted most requests...