Tommy

 

A variety of applications (like TweetDeck) can monitor twitter chatter based on keywords and other filters. Imagine if you were monitoring this data during a certain important time period. You could put your finger on exactly what people were interested in at a certain place and time, and the difference between interests at different places.

The NYT has done just that with SuperBowl related tweets, organized along a time-line punctuated by various markers such as TD and FG.

Twitter Chatter

The implications are pretty staggering. Take advertising as a simple and obvious example. Advertisers could set up a Twitter filter using words tailored for their ad. The data provided could tell them what areas of the country responded most favorably (or at least most often), when, and possibly even why. Notice, for example, that at a particular point in the game, when the Steelers have the lead, Arizona is all a-twitter about the Cardinals, and presumably couldn’t care less about the Hulu commercial. By contrast, that’s the dominant topic of conversation in the NE.

Any thoughts on how to harness this kind of information for the church? There is a Sunday morning #rollcall hash-tag that could make this an interesting topic of conversation.

 

As an addendum to my guide to setting up Bibleworks 7 and 8 in Linux, I should mention this encouraging statement from the Bibleworks Website:

BibleWorks comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee. If you purchase BibleWorks directly from us but cannot get it to work with your Windows emulator, you may return BibleWorks for a refund (shipping not included).

 

Bibleworks 8 now runs in Linux through WINE.

I posted a guide awhile back walking Linux users through the steps required to get Bibleworks 7 up-and-running in Linux (using Wine). It has recently been confirmed that the steps used in that guide also work for Bibleworks 8. If you are interested in running Bibleworks in Linux (Ubuntu, Fedora, OpenSUSE) you can find the guide here.

Surprisingly, it appears that some problems that plagued Bibleworks 7 in Linux are no longer issues in Bibleworks 8. This is good news!

 

Thinking about starting a blog for personal or church use? Your first decision is what platform to use. It’s an important choice since it is difficult to change services. ChurchCrunch has an excellent overview and analysis of the available options.

 

Google Earth, an already amazing technology, today received a serious upgrade. Once “limited” to contemporary snapshots of the Earth made through a composite of satellite imagery, Google Earth now provides a whole set of overlays that allow you to view the earth’s past as well as its present.

In addition, Google Earth 5.0, the most recent iteration, lets you view under-the-sea terrain and, somewhat mis-nomerically (is there a good word for this?), the surface of Mars. While these new features are somewhat limited at this point (how far back in time you can go depends on your current zoom level, for example), this is an important harbinger of what is to come.

An excellent article describing these important new features, and their significance, with screenshots, can be found here. Google Earth is shaping up to be a very powerful research tool. It has already allowed us to take a tour of Ancient Rome, and with these new tools it promises to continue to grow as a premier research tool.

 
A sample drop, here organized like a simple blog.

A sample drop, here organized like a simple blog.

The web service drop.io is an excellent site that allows you to store just about anything you might want—text, pictures, audio, video, phone calls, etc.—in a secure, easily accessible “drop.” This may sound pretty basic, and it is, but what makes drop.io worth your time and attention are all the fancy features surrounding it. Let me give you an example that I frequently use.

Don’t Forget Sermon Illustrations

Imagine this situation. You’re preaching on Sunday. In the course of driving to work you frequently listen to the radio, to a book-on-top, or to music or NPR, and suddenly you realize that whatever you’re listening to would be the perfect intro analogy to Sunday’s sermon. What do you do? Trust you’ll remember? You won’t. Pull over and write it down? That’s neither safe nor time-efficient. Call your voice mail? Most voice-mail boxes give you 20 seconds or so, and it’s easy to forget about them.

Each drop has its own phone number

Each drop has its own phone number

Well, with drop.io you can just call your drop and leave yourself a message, which will be sitting in your email inbox (or feed reader, or medium of choice) when you get to work. This is simple, convenient, and fast. You can’t loose your note or forget about it (since it’s in your inbox), and you can download all your voice messages at any time. And this is just the beginning!

Imagine the possibilities

The possibilities are legion. With drop.io you never have to forget a task or appointment. If you make a promise to someone, but aren’t at your computer to add your new task to Outlook or Remember the Milk, just call your drop. What’s really cool here is that your voice messages each have dedicated web links, so you can just copy the link into your Getting Things Done tool of choice and add a due-date. Easy.

Or perhaps you are prone to dissertation-related brainstorms in the middle of exercising or long walks. No need to pause to get pen and paper! Just call your drop and keep running. Your idea will be ready and waiting for you when you get home. You can even add the link or the file itself directly into Zotero (my Bibliographic/Annotating software of choice).

As mentioned before, you can store any number of items on your drop. You can easily add web links, documents, pictures, and music. You can call your drop or send it a fax. And all of this is then available immediately in your drop to view, download, share with friends or coworkers, or simply store in a safe place until you need it.

Setting Up Your Drop

Start here

Start here

It’s easy to get started. Just go to drop.io and follow the instructions. Drops are free (you get 100 mb of space per drop) and you can have as many drops as you want (I have one for GTD, one for sermons, one for my dissertation, one for each class I teach, etc). By default your drop will be named by a random set of characters. You can change this, however. Give it a name that means something to you. I created a drop called “nerdletstest” for this guide. You can access your drop by going to http://drop.io/[Your Drop's Name]; in this case, drop.io/nerdletstest.

Be sure to check out the “Additional Settings” on the start page. If you want your drop to be private, set a password. You can than share the drop password with anyone you want, or with no one. Guests can view, add, or delete files, or you can forbid all these actions. It all depends on how you want to use your drop. All of these settings can be changed at any time.

Bookmark your drop so you don’t have to remember where it is. Now you can view it anywhere!

Notifications

Several options for notifying yourself of new drop content.

Several options for notifying yourself of new drop content.

You can use drop.io for a number of different things, but if you want to use it in the manner outlined above you will need a way to notify yourself when something has been added to your drop. There are several ways to do this, and they are all located under the “Share” tab.

The simplest notification option is to tell your drop your email address. Anytime you add something to your drop (like a phone message), you will receive an email in your inbox. (If you’re using drop.io for GTD, this is an ideal solution since your email is connected to the rest of GTD methods).

Personally, I’m a big fan of RSS Readers like Google Reader. Drop.io lets you subscribe to drops, and so my preferred notification method is by RSS (the link under Email Alerts). You can also subscribe by Podcast or send your cell phone a text message. Look around—there really is no shortage of options!

Sending Things to Your Drop

We have already mentioned that each drop has its own phone number. You can call your drop and the message you leave will be saved as a downloadable audio file. You can also use drop.io’s web interface to add files, links, text, and other items to your drop.

There are a wealth of other options, however. You can email files to your drop. You can set up conference calss through your drop. There is also a Firefox Plugin that allows you to bookmark your drops and drag-and-drop files into them.

More to Come

Drop.io is a fairly new service (though I mentioned it here last year when it was still in Beta), so expect more features soon. They have a rich programming interface, which means that there will be more and more ways to interact with our drops in the future. In short, drop.io is a great service (and an excellent replacement for the no-longer-free Jott). Give it a try, and please share your thoughts!

 
New features at an already great site

New features at an already great site

I’ve mention Bible.Logos.com before. It’s a pretty handy and fluid online Bible. Today it gets an upgrade:

As you navigate through the Bible, we dynamically pull relevant content—both sermons and illustrations—from our Sermons site and display the top three hits with a link to all of the other contributions that deal with the passage of Scripture you’re in.

The coolest part is that no matter where you are in the Bible, the list is automatically updated so there are always related sermons and illustrations just a click away.

This is definitely worth checking out. Logos has put together one of the better web-based Bibles out there. In addition to a variety of English translations they have recently added a number of additional Greek texts, including novum testamentum graece (in Unicode). The site is intuitive and the searching features are robust enough to find what you need. Give it a try.

If you need better Greek searching and features, try Zhubert.

 

You can now access Gmail offline. Read about that here

 

Mounce fields a question I get a lot: how do you use your Greek in the pulpit? His answer is well worth a read. My favorite part:

It starts with your homework. The most important place to use biblical languages is behind the scenes in doing your research, whether it be sermon preparation or getting ready for a Bible study. The languages give you access to tools that are far beyond the reach of English.

In class I have sometimes used a cooking analogy to get this across. Imagine someone in cooking school. One day one they are taught how to make pancakes. The good chef does not respond, “Why should I have to learn how to make pancakes? Why not just use Aunt Jemima?” The master chef does not pull out Aunt Jemima. Aunt Jemima may be easy—the ingredients are already mixed up together, just add water!—but the master chef always starts from scratch. Why? Because he knows his ingredients and wants to use them effectively. In the same way the pastor should be a master exegete. He should not rely on the pre-packaged just-add-water translations available to him. Those translations have already made all the tough decisions! Rather, the pastor should struggle with the original, even if only in a limited way.

And here is another good rule, this time more on presentation:

But I imagine that you have noticed I have not yet used the word “Greek” or “Hebrew” publicly. This is my general rule. When I want to talk about the meaning of the Greek word, I say something like, “The word translated such-and-such has a range of meanings that includes.…”

Read the whole thing.

 

Sorry for two-in-a-row from Lifehacker, but this is important stuff.

By the way, Lifehacker is a really wonderful blog. Whether you’re a tech-guru or not, they always have wonderful advice, most of which will save you money. Visit their site, or just subscribe.

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