Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM)

Posts Tagged ‘connectivity’

Merging the Tech Windows of a Biblical Expereince

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

I am fast to say that there are aspects of mobile/web/connected technologies that make sense towards engaging and being transformed by the Bible or other texts. But, the experience is always layered. There’s the device… the moment… the software… the text/audio… what window can I engage it in at that given that that will enable me to put my entire being in that Joshua 1:8 state?

And then I looked at this and smiled:

Now, this is a video demonstrating various technologies available and in use right now (XBox Kinect, Microsoft Surface, Windows 7 on a tablet, Windows Phone 7, email, IM, SMS, optical recognition technologies, etc.). But, it gets me excited because its not beyond anything that many of us have in our homes in whole or in part towards taking that “get in the Bible” experience and pushing it a bit more.

Let’s reframe the video a bit see what I mean:

  • You see in the beginning that small group IM/SMS session that’s going on? That could very easily be your small (cell) group and a conversation that’s happening amongst them.
  • The blueprint you see overlaid could be the entire Bible, or more specifically the sermon outline with some identifiers to Bible, commentaries, Wikipedia/Britannica, and web search entries that further expand the central them (the room being a theme, the rooms being the explorations of those themes)
  • Now, the key here is that there’s not a layer to the communication aspects. Some might be in the same room using an XBox Kinect to “see” the same experience, but others might be using voice only, mobiles, tablets, or some combination to engage the discussion.
  • Love that part where “Bill” takes us into the master bedroom. Can that be the “taking us into a tour of the temple?” Going a bit further than Glo Bible (a well done app experience I might add) of showing pictures, but we get a virtual room of the building and the people in that context.
  • That end result, changing the door handle and adding a lamp, what happens when we are in a room (world) and we add a door or light to the environment?

Several weeks ago, my aunt and I were talking about an iPad and I shifted the discussion to what she would think of as the perfect Bible app. She responded to something like this video and our reframing – a visual and audio tour through the world of the Bible, but it connects to the physical world so that you could get a literal learning of the text and more readily apply the lesson.

If you are a pastor or lesson leader, could you get along with merging things like this? If so, do you think some of this is possible right now with what you have on your desk, in your pocket, or even, in your family room?

video via istartedsomething

 

Connecting to Missionaries via Skype

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

When we look around the Body towards what people are doing with mobile tech, it is always refreshing to see local communities stretching their use of tech in global-touching manners.

Wes Allen, a brother that I was blessed to meet in person at BibleTech 2009, has recently written a post about how his church is connecting with missionaries in Thailand via Skype. Here’s a snippet:

On October 31 Central Baptist Church of Riverton-Palmyra marked the last week of the World Mission Offering by having a missionary come and share with us during worship. This isn’t that unusual a practice. After all, churches have been bringing in missionaries as guest speakers for centuries. What marked this conversation as “different,” was the location of our guest speaker, Kit Ripley. She was literally on the other side of the globe, in Thailand. What made this conversation was the advent of free video conferencing over broadband Internet – pioneered by software like Skype…

Read the rest at ABCNJ.

As we have seen with this tech over several years, the ability to connect with one another doesn’t always need to start and end with the physical presence. There are moments where going virtual are more cost and time effective, and can open doors to other ways of empowering our communities and one another to use the tools at our disposal for the cause of the Gospel.

Besides Skype, are you taking advantage of virtual conferencing solutions to connect groups across distances? How have those relationships been challenged or strengthened in using these technologies?

 

Does Publishing Change or Do We

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

Composed in Evernote, this is a doc that I’ve been working on for a week or so. Hope it comes out nice.

Am sitting is a car at the moment talking about the kiosk project and some of the issues that relate to how the bible publishing industry can move forward. We know for certain that publishing the way that is has been going for the last 50-100 years isn’t going to continue in the face of advancements made digitally. From content distribution to monetization, there are questions to be addressed and none of them will endear easy answers.

Ownership and Access

The common perception of ownership is that of sovereignty and domain. When you purchase a product, you take responsibility of it’s upkeep and any additional service to fix or improve the initially purchased product is done for an additional fee.

Access is the ability to get to content, but not necessarily the ability to change or maintain it. Access usually has additional rules around it such as copying, sharing, and forwarded distribution. In some cases, access might be tied to another service agreement which allows for updates to the content (product) and some kinds of maintenance.

To be blunt, there has never been a model of publishing where we have owned the Bible. Access is granted through agreements we enter into with publishing houses. Distributors may also have a slice of this access pie, but it all ends up in the same equation – you don’t own your biblical material, you are granted access.

Access and Publishing

With that said, the publishing industry would seem to have an excellent heads-up on some of the upcoming trends in this information economy. They have the intent, the content, and the understanding of the marketplace to continue with this model for some time longer. Truly, there are many persons who don’t have access to the Bible or it’s associated materials who would prove to be solid markets for publishing houses to pursue.

Yet, as I look at the world around me, the question about information isn’t ownership, it is access. If I have the access to the source, when I need it, does it make sense to continue to purchase access in silos (books, applications, audio formats)?

The kiosk proposes that someone only needs to know where a central content distribution area is. The internet proposes that you only need to know the website, or at the very least be connected to a person who does have the access and will share it (that link) with you. To a publisher, how does their model of selling success make sense in the light of such changes in the receiving method?

Publishing’s Opportunity to Change

There have been a lot of calls for publishing to change. We’ve gotten into the fray here with our series item The Future of (Biblical) Publishing. And it is true to an extent that publishers are facing the moment of change, thing is, they still hold the cards (content). Therefore, anything that looks like change to them has to ultimately work in their benefit.

Monday Note recently posted an article in a similar scope to MMM’s and came to a similar conclusion:

“Coming back to the subject of this column, the shift from paid-for files to rights for books or digital contents won’t come easily. As a telco exec told me last week: ‘It took centuries to convince people their money was more secure in a bank than under a mattress; convincing them they should trade ownership for access rights will take some time’.”

Publishing’s opportunity to change isn’t just a matter of changing to a digital-enabled economy, but being a literal agent of behavioral change for authors/consumers. But, if I were a publisher, how could I go about changing something that was so embedded into the way we think/use content?

Or, is it us who need to change our viewpoint of what really is the reality of ownership, and modify our perceptions and use to that in light of publishing’s hold on content?

 

Accurately Discerning the Word

Friday, August 6th, 2010

One of the conversations had earlier this week also noted an aspect of mobility and constant access that speaks into other areas. The the subject in that part of the conversation had to do with the issue of how to verify that the things being read online are true enough to build a stable doctrinal foundation.

Thursday night, this topic came up again as some brothers were talking about 2 Timothy 2, and the impression by Paul on Timothy to not just strive for an understanding in all things (v.7), but to not let that understanding lead you into arguments over vain and profane topics (v.16). As we talked about the characteristics of a conversation what is mature, this sub-topic of exactly “how” to study to become acccurate in doctrine (v.15).

As technologists and students of the Word, it is very easy to get into “I use this application to study because it offers this and that feature.” I’d like to mature that question by asking the very pointed question:

If you have been using digital biblical study aides for an extended amount of time; what have you learned about digital resources and the content offered which enables you to discern those things profitable from those things heretical?

This is a tough question for some, because the challenge isn’t just to say “I know because the Spirit told me so.” The burden of proof is on how you take whatever topic or area of Scripture you are studying and how this relates to the previously held and disputed contentions about that item over the course of Judeao-Christian history. Ideally, the “how you discern” comes from such attention. I’d like to know what that looks like, based on usage of digital resources and the experiences within ministry you’ve had.

And if you’ve not quite figured out the “how” just yet, but looking to do so, comment towards what exactly you are having trouble with, or what specific challenges you might be having relating the availability of information, the expanse of it, and then that undertaking of reading the right things.

Looking forward to your comments on this one.

 

Next Generation Biblical Interfaces and Experiences

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Depending on your choice of news, there’s a sense that we are innovative and not innovative enough when it comes to various computer technology applications. And that’s to be expected since there’s been such a boon in the abilities of devices, software, and the people and process around them.

Since obtaining an iPad, one of the areas that has been sparked again towards interest is this aspect of interfacing with content. Check out this TED video via AR Ideas.

Now, when we think about interfaces that take advantaged of connected spaces, this is a good example of what’s possible. How then do we look at the lens of biblical software, and how such an interface could be extended around it?

  • First we need some kind of open API (like Logos’ Biblia API)
  • Then we’d need to have it work with as many devices as possible (web frameworks, a browser like Layar perhaps)
  • An ease at keeping track of all of this (iTunes and Google Dashboard offer takes on that solution)
  • The hardware needs to be inexpensive (have you seen the prices of Nokia’s mobile’s lately, sheesh)

After that, it would be a matter of grabbing imagination and running forward.

Maybe its something like Minority Report where a special glove or set of glasses opens up the connectivity to the text that you are looking at at YouVersion. Or, possibility its a who/where search for associated content – kind of like your personal or community version of Amazon’s Recommendations – that allows you to not just collaborate, but purchase in an authenticated manner the license to read and use that content.

As I type this, my mobile is on the other side of the room, playing music. I’m using a Bluetooth remote to control the music, and to note when emails and text messages are coming in. I have in front of me a Strong Concordance and a print Bible – if those two printed pieces of work could integrate with what my mobile is doing, it wouldn’t just open up the world for me to learn, but also for those who’d benefit from what they share to me and what I share with them.

In thinking about user interfaces and the experiences that we want to foster, these are some of the possibilities. And some of this will come to pass soon (see the video). What we do with the level of interaction and power will be really interesting.

 

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