Google still plans to shut off its ill-fated Google Wave on April 30. The real-time collaboration tool, designed to merge email, wikis and other forms of communication into a single wave, never enjoyed the consumer traction of other Google products such as Gmail. The search-engine giant subsequently released a considerable portion of the source code as open-source software.
Google Wave is now in read-only mode, read part of a Google email sent to former Wave users. You will be able to continue exporting individual waves using the existing PDF export feature until the Google Wave service is turned off.
Current open-source projects based on Wave include Apache Wave. Users can also rely on Walkaround to import Waves from wave.google.com, in theory allowing work with the program past that April 30 shutdown date. Walkaround supports features such as in-line replies, wave gadgets, attachments and full-text search, but does not support Wave extensions or folder management.
Google once had high hopes for Wave. In early 2010, executives announced plans to integrate Wave features into other Google products, although it remained unclear how exactly such an initiative would take shape. By then, Google had confirmed to eWEEK that some 1 million people were actively using the service.
However, there were also some complaintsincluding one from blogger Anil Dashthat Google Waves complexity made it unpalatable to third-party programmers looking to write collaboration applications. By August 2010, it also seemed as if customers werent gravitating toward the platform in numbers sufficient for Google, which decided to stop building Wave as a standalone product.
What happened was we liked the UI and we liked a lot of the new features in it, but it didnt get enough traction, Googles then-CEO Eric Schmidt told media during the Techonomy conference that month. So were taking those technologies and applying them to new technologies that are not announced. So, basically, well get the benefits of Google Wave but not as a separate product.
Now, the last vestiges of Wave, at least as a Google product, seem primed to implode, as well.