September to sweep up 100,000 in first public Google Wave

Developers already working on it

NEWS

The majority of users will have to wait a little longer to get their hands on Google Wave.

While about 6,000 developers got their hands on Wave on Monday, a post on the Google Wave developer blog says the company isn't planning to open it up to everyday users until 30 September. At that time, some 100,000 users will be let into the program. To be included in that first run, users will have had to have signed up to use the service on Google's invite page.

Along with a hard date on the semi-public beta test, Google also highlighted a few developer creations using Wave's API. One of them, called Waves in WordPress, lets bloggers quickly embed an entire Wave conversation into a blog post, which lets readers view and interact with it. Similar tools that let you do that with other social and blogging can be expected as Wave's API matures.

First introduced at the Google I/O Conference back in late May, Wave is Google's reimagining of web email, and a sibling of Gmail - the company's current web mail product. It blends live chat and email in one service, and is one of Google's most experimental creations yet. Google says it still has some more work to do on the project before it's ready for beta testers to start drumming on it, including how fast and stable it is.

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