Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM)

Posts Tagged ‘eInk’

OSNOVA and Designing Effective In-Bible Interfaces

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

Of the few complaints that you tend to hear from those using Kindles/Nooks/Kobos and similar eInk-based reading devices, the primary ones have to do with the speed of navigating while inside of a book. Getting around to different materials isn’t so much the problem for some. Its when they want to get around inside of the materials that there’s a challenge, and sometimes a disappointment.

Over at This Lamp, a commentary on the user interface (UI) refinements made with OSNOVA have been published. This gets me excited because of my personal history with mobile Bible interfaces (Palm Bible+ and Katana specifically) and the amount of work that needs to go into making just getting around as efficient and productive as possible. Here’s a snippet of This Lamp’s observations:

…So, if a Kindle user wants to go directly to a verse, in many non-OSNOVA Kindle Bibles, he or she would have to go to the menu on the Kindle, then table of contents, then scroll through the pages until the book of the Bible sought after appears. Some ebook Bibles have chapter numbers listed, but I’ve seen other Bibles in which the Contents merely takes one to the first chapter in the selected book. With OSNOVA’s DVJ, a specific verse can be accessed directly by typing in an abbreviated form that works with the Kindle. So, if I want to go to Romans 1:17, I’d type ro 1 17 and the Kindle immediately jumps to that location in the Bible…

Read the rest of This Lamp’s experiences with OSNOVA. Also, check out the OSNOVA website for optimized documents for Kindle, Nook, Kobo, and other eInk devices. There are also several tutorial videos on this interface at the OSNOVA blog.

The Efficient Interface Is the One That’s Transforms Lives

One of the best selling features for a Bible/reading application is the efficiency of the user interface. In talking with friends about my iPad during Thanksgiving meals, one of the comments against the iPad was that people couldn’t see how a device like a tablet would be conductive to annotation behaviors such as writing on margins, highlighting, proofreading, and cut-pasting-mashing up more than just lines of text. In that conversation, I demonstrated the abilities of Good Reader (an iPad document reader with many of those features). Upon using it for themselves, the viability of eReaders and tablets became more relevant.

Hence the challenge for user interface (UI) and user experience (UX) folks:design into content pleasurable experiences which take advantage of the technology, not simply repeat the behaviors of less capable media.

 

Mother’s Day and a Kindle

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

This past weekend was Mother’s Day in the US (and a few other countries) and spending it with mom was definitely a treat. One of the things we did together was to attend her chruch (of which I was one-time a member) and just engage that time of fellowship and the Word together.

What I didn’t expect is to have another one of those inadvertant research sessions where I’d see and catalog a number of people and their mobile tech usage.

Mom’s church is a fairly large one (over 5000 people on just the main campus), and there’s a lot of technology that has been used there over the years. Before I left that church to center fellowships more around my college campus, I was seen there quite often with a Palm PDA in hand, reading the Word and engaging with others. It was a strange sight then, and I got dinged for “playing during service” many times before people understood that mobile was the way forward for many of us.

So this past Sunday, as we all stood to read chapter 2 of Exodus (the message was on the faith of a believing mother), I scanned the audience looking for familiar faces. Besides seeing a few, I noticed that there were a number of people reading the Bible on their mobile devices. Blackberries, iPhones, and a few others in cases where I couldn’t tell exactly the model. But this was neat. Mobile tech being used to read the Word. Totally not my experience of about a decade ago.

And then I saw a mother in front of me. She and her daughter were reading, but it wasn’t from a smartphone. They were using the Amazon Kindle and sharing the reading experience together. From my vantage point in the pew behind them, this was something they were both comfortable with. Even to the point of the mother highlighting and noting as the passage was being read.

I glanced over to my mom who had taken to looking at the Bible from my mobile device. I’ve had nothing short of trouble finding an easy to use Bible reader for her mobile device. And yet, there we were over the smaller screen (and larger text size than was in her printed version) engaging the Word in a public reading moment.

There are a lot of things that we can be thankful for mothers for. And on this past Mother’s Day, I noticed mothers playing a role of nuturing spiritual development while engaging within another stage of technology. Nothing really different, and at the same time, this marked a rose of a different kind showing its petals.

 

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