Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM)

Posts Tagged ‘visual story’

[Repost] Good Friday, Narrated Through a Mobile Lens

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Last year, we composed an account of this Easter weekend, but told through the perspective of what things could look like if mobile was a part of the story. Here’s a snippet of the story:

It was only a 30 second clip. But that was all that we needed to see. There he was, I think. In the face it looked like him, but the body was badily bruised. He had something on his head, but I couldn’t tell – I’ve got a simple mobile without a good screen. It looked like he nearly fell with some beam on his back, but then some other guy grabs the beam from him and then the scene cuts. We all looked at one another terrified. We knew what was next. This kind of message only comes out for certain kinds of capital punishments.

My mobile had been off for a few hours. I needed to relocate and didn’t need any cell towers tracking my movements. Better that myIMEI simply shows up in a different region with a different SIM than traveling across regions. It was around noon when mine and all the mobile around me beeped again. There was another MMS. This one felt different. The sky had darkened before it came in. I had this feeling in my stomach that I lost something very important.

Read the rest of Good Friday, Narrated Through a Mobile Lens, this story continues on Easter Sunday.

 

Spatial Interfaces, Theological Literacy

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

Tim Challies Visual Theology - Books of the Bible iPad-sizedLast week, or so, I wrote over on my personal site (Blog.AntoineRJWright) a post talking about this idea of spatial interfaces and how the concept of such a means of navigation intersects directly with the thoughts I’ve been having about theological (more specifically, biblical) literacy and what that means we should be enabling given this age of connectivity, productivty, and access to tools of publishing (re: internet). Here’s a snippet:

As I was just going through Twitter and seeing what all people have been posting about today. I came across a neat Biblical visualization from Tim Challies. Seeing this reminded me that I’ve not done much of an update here (or MMM) about the All Books Project that I’ve been working on. So, let’s talk spatial interfaces (a topic seen in a recent meetup I attended) and theological literacy – and why these merge nicely.

Read of the rest of Spatial Interfaces, Theological Literacy at Blog.AntoineRJWright

I make some bold claims in that piece (“theological literacy isn’t just reading/comprehension, but its able to (re)create the Word contextually” for example). What are your thoughts? Especially for those of you whom are teachers/pastors, can you teach to this level? And if not, are you misapplying the term literacy in light of the command in Matthew 28:18-20?

 

Opportunities with Mobile TV

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

Change that’s been caused by mobile can sometimes be very swift and loud, or something that happens quietly, starting at first slowly, and then there’s a watershed moment. This has been the case in respect to the cellular subscriptions (in the hundreds of thousands 15 years ago, nearing 5 Billion at this moment), SMS use, mobile internet use, and even mobiles replacing digital cameras.

In the case of these mobile disruptions, there’s always been ripe opportunity for enterprising persons to take what we knew, and then mix in the new, and create something new. I wonder what some of those opportunities would look like in respect to mobile TV?

Why mobile TV? Well, look at the announcement that Nokia made today in respect to a new mobile TV accessory. Given their projections towards the devices they will sell that would be compatible with this device (tens of millions per year), this could have a profound effect on our concept of TV.

We’d do best not to ignore some context here. The digital TV standard being used with the accessory (DVB-H) isn’t widely deployed all over the world – there are about a dozen or so regions that have it up and running now, and not too many of them seem to be advertising it as much. So, opportunity isn’t as obvious, but it is there for those areas where DVB-H is in play.

That being said, those who move first usually get the benefit of making (or breaking) the best impressions to the general public. Given what we know that’s happening around digital media, visual storytelling, and YouTube/Hulu’s redefinition of broadcast TV, what are some of the opportunities that lie out there for ministries who can use mobile TV as part of their communications and outreach strategies?

And if the opportunities are there, are you moving with them, or waiting until something else comes along validating your venture into another mobile disruption?

 

A Test, A Refreshing Look at “Story”

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

It has been a long while since submitting a post to MMM through email to Blogger. but, since its a bit of a cludge to do this via Blogger, and I don’t have as neat a blogging widget/WRT app as WordPress has for Symbian, I’m rolling with this method.

The good thing about using email though is that the tone of posts changes a bit. Its not just a blog composition window, its an email window which invites more of an incentive to tell a story.

The idea of ”story” is one that has effected the perspective of how the intersection is intrepreted here at MMM since the VSN Conference last September. Mobile has this front row seat in all of our lives because of how close to most of our actions it stands. And at the same time, mobile is this window into the stories of other people: voice, text, images, audio, and video all play their parts. It’s through this mobile lens, and really through the method that we use this mobile lens, where this idea of “mobile story” plays out.

MMM hits 5 years old (as a blog) around the 25th of this month. If I can get to a PC, I’ll hopefully have the time to make a small effort towards the redesign that will hopefully thrust MMM into the realm of enabling you to better tell, see, touch, and hear the story of our Christian faith with this mobile lens.

No, the site won’t change in its mission to be at the intersection – we will just make sure that at the intersection that you use that mobile lens to have something to tell.

Where we go from there probably won’t be defined for another half a decade. Then again, if MMM makes it another 5, it really will be a story worth telling, no matter the method its composed.

 

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