
JournalAKAImBatman's Journal:How I Slashdotted Google15
It's not every day that you get someone from Google showing up to check on the spreadsheet you shared out using the Google Documents site. But that's exactly what happened after I posted such a spreadsheet in a Slashdot comment and accidentally created an impromptu chat room.
Someone over on Google must have been curious about all those server spikes, because a viewer with the address of google@google.com showed up shortly after the user traffic peaked. In fact, I had never expected that the discussion feature of the spreadsheet would attract so much attention. I figured that people would simply look at the sheet and discuss it on Slashdot. Perhaps even make a copy, modify it, and share it out.
So what could I do when the Google lurker was noticed? Quickly yank the spreadsheet from the public eye? Close my account and hope Google never traces it back to me? No, I went for hollering out an apology for the Slashdotting over the aforementioned discussion feature. This must have satisfied the lurker, because he then exited the sheet without saying so much as a word.
Then again last night, the sheet received a chat from a person with the gmail name of "google". The message was simply, "A chat room through the spreadsheet discussion? Who would have thought?"
While there's no concrete proof that these users were indeed from Google, it does seems likely given how Google tends to control its name inside its own system. Thus I have to wonder, will there be any repercussions from this? Will Slashdoters regularly create impromptu chat rooms with spreadsheets? Will Google use this as an example of how well their collaboration features work? Or will the whole thing simply blow over?
Who knows? But I can say that this little spreadsheet gone haywire was a fun experiment. And if we want to keep Google on its toes, we can always do it again!
Lots of /.'ers must work for GOOG (Score:2)
Of course, their employer has a great mechanism to determine if this has been violated online.
Re: (Score:2)
Fascination (Score:2)
So what could I do when the Google lurker was noticed? Quickly yank the spreadsheet from the public eye? Close my account and hope Google never traces it back to me? No, I went for hollering out an apology for the Slashdotting over the aforementioned discussion feature. This must have satisfied the lurker, because he then exited the sheet without saying so much as a word.
Then again last night, the sheet received a chat from a person with the gmail name of "google". The message was simply, "A chat room through the spreadsheet discussion? Who would have thought?"
Seems like a bit of paranoia... I think it's more the case that, if this was some Google monitoring because of all the activity, that they were fascinated by what was going on and just wanted to see what the scoop was all about. Just like someone who plays World of Warcraft for the first time might say "A chat room through a video game? Who would have thought?"
Re: (Score:2)
The message from "google" is enough to make you wonder, though. Has it become a bit of internal buzz for Go
Re: (Score:2)
Nice working finding an interesting way to use their tool.
-Rick
Re: (Score:2)
Isn't this similar to Wiki's 'discuss' panel? (Score:1)
It's reassuring that GOOG seems to have adopted the 'cool! I wish I had thought of that' approach and quietly monitor how things turned out. Too often the makers/owners pull out the baseball bat and try to curb the creative use that the clever individual discovered.
Next thing you know they'll be plopping Google Chat func
Re: (Score:2)
Google Spreadsheets have live chat. Probably based on GChat.
Headers (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Why...? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Good Point (Score:2)
The point is made regardless, the insufferable amount of bloat that is completely rampant can only be seen by looking at really well designed programs. Plan
Re: (Score:2)
Second tab, two separate links to such spreadsheets.