Archive for the ‘Devices and Software’ Category

Jeff Wheeler, co-Founder of Laridian Bible Software, Passes

Thursday, May 10th, 2012

On Monday (5/7), we greived with many others in the Bible software/mobile ministry community when the post went up at the Laridian blog noted that Jeff Wheeler lost his fight with cancer.

As with many who are enjoying Bibles on their mobile devices, we owe a whole lot to the activities of Jeff and Craig – who are literally a few of the real pioneers of Bible software. Pocket Bible, in its many platform iterations (Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, PalmOS, Windows Mobile, Java), was likely one of the first Bible apps you tried out until recently. And even though there are others who have taken the stick in terms of leading the charge in this space, Pocket Bible has instigated many core features around library management, navigation, and spiritual focus that remain core characteristics of the electronic Bible reading experience. Jeff Wheeler was a big gear to many of those innovations, and his passion and heart for this space will be greatly missed.

Our condolences and prayers to the Wheeler family and Laridian Bible software for their loss.

 

Desknots and the 7 Deadly Myths of Mobile

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

Caught both of these last week while taking in some of the tweets happening during the Breaking Development Conference (#bdconf). I’ll let the quotes and full articles pretty much speak for themselves:

Desknots are connected devices that present alternative contexts and form factors for non-desktop computing… Desknots aren’t (necessarily) mobile. Desknots aren’t (necessarily) wireless. Desknots aren’t (necessarily) personal. Every category of desknot has contexts, form factor, use cases, and usability considerations that are very different from the desktop. It’s useful to have a term that suggests: “hey, it’s not just about the desktop…

Read the rest of Desknots at Global Moxie – would you agree with the term?

In light of desknots, there’s also this reclarifying about what mobile is and isn’t. Here’s a listing of some mobile myths from Josh Clark which break this down:

  • mobile myth #1: users are on the go and rushed
  • myth #2: mobile = less
  • myth #3: complexity is a dirty word
  • myth #4: extra taps and clicks are evil
  • myth #5: you gotta have a mobile website
  • myth #6: mobile is about apps
  • myth #7: cms & api are for database nerds

I’d recommend reading in detail why Josh Clark calls this myths on the full post at his website. At the moment, I’min agreement with all but one of them (go ahead guess that one).

How do these perspective fall inline with your existing thoughts about mobile? Do you gain clarity, or is there a muddling of definitions?

 

Have Tablets and Mobiles Changed How You View/Use the Bible

Sunday, April 22nd, 2012

Bible apps on Palm Treo and HP iPaq 1940A few days ago, a post went up over at the BigBible Project talking about six ways a phone can change your view of the Bible. An insightful and reflective post, the six points were:

  1. Instant access to a library of commentaries and translations
  2. Make the text your own (w/highlights, notes and bookmarks)
  3. Bible reading becomes public and social
  4. Bible reading can be monitored and held accountable
  5. Bible reading becomes private and invisible
  6. Software is interpretation

Those reasons caused me to reflect a good bit towards how I’ve changed and evolved because of Bibles on my tablets and mobile devices. Some of the points from BigBible Project’s article fit – but then I realized how I’ve gone in a bit more on aa few of them.

For example, the idea of instant access to commentaries and translations is less important than what it used to be. I’m more interested in the sociological, geological, and other historical documents that affirm or challenge the text. Instead of highlights and bookmaks, I draw. I don’t care to be so public with me reading; but I do like the ease some services offer in sharing the text (such as Bib.ly and Ref.ly). Software is definitely interpretation – and that’s where I feel that biblical literacy shouldn’t just be reading the text, but building it as well. Its interesting, and through that list I can see how far I’ve come since getting that digital Bible on a PDA more than a decade ago.

So what about you? How has tablets and mobiles, or just the access to various Biblical services or classes, changed how you use or view the Bible? Do you see anything to be alarmed about it what has changed for you? Or, do you like the way in which you are evolving?

 

Enterra Gives Developers Insight to Business Mobile App Development

Friday, April 20th, 2012

banner methodology written on glassOne of the requests we’ve had out there for sometime is some testimonials, or case studies, in which those whom are building applications and services that service mobile and mobile ministry endeavors can be highlighted and lend some light to the depth and challenges in this space. A response came from a company, Enterra, whose post on business mobile application development, specifically from a developer’s point of view, is quite appreciated. Here’s a snippet of this expansive and well-written piecce:

…One of the main steps of contract preparation is writing a SOW (Scope Of Work) – a brief list of requirements to the application. For small and medium projects SOW is enough to start the development. For large-scale projects after the contract signing there’s a preparation of technical task.

SOW and technical task are a formalization of developer’s and customer’s vision in terms of the developed applications. It’s an opportunity to get sure that the vision is the same, the borders are set and the wishes are known. But these documents are strictly technical and may not fully reflect the business processes inside the app. So it’s best to read the documentation thoroughly, ask about all the terms and require comments for acquiring your wishes.

In some cases the estimation changes after preparing the SOW, mostly to the larger side. Maybe you came out of your own task borders. Maybe it turned out that the cheaper technologies cannot be used, and the more expensive ones are required. Maybe the contractor offered something more expensive, but more progressive or easier to deploy. The decision of continuing/cancelling the work is up to you and your trust to the contractor. But I strongly recommend to discuss all the changes. If the increase of cost is really required and useful, the contractor will always be able to explain in adequately…

Read the rest of Business Mobile Application Development: The Developer’s Insight at Enterra

The perspectives in this mirrors our mobile minsitry methodology and how we’ve recommended you approach building a mobile ministry app/website, while offering some very real accounts of what works and what doesn’t.

For more information including getting a quote for development work, visit Enterra’s website.

 

Could Mobile Also Be A Species to Steward

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

Tamagotchi via WikipediaI will admit that I’ve only thought on this end of things here and there. But, its there. And at least in respect to thinking about these implications of mobile, it makes sense to at least broach the subject: what if we look at mobile the same way we look at animals? What would the ministry implication look like in that respect?

What Got Me Down This Line
Of those implications to mobility, and evolutions within this space, one of the areas I see coming down the pipe is that of cybernetics and AI. This idea that technologies can be grafted onto the organic/natural facilities that we have, and with some kind of computational nature that goes a bit beyond what we might have realized within ourselves. Its not a prediction of where things are going so much as it is an observation. And as such, insights on the subject have interested me beyond the fictional accounts of future-scapes that I read often as a child:

…Donna Haraway, theorist on our transformation into cyborgs, published ‘The Companion Species Manifesto’ in 2003. It addresses the relationship between domestic dogs and humans, but there is much in there to inspire designers of smartphones, apps and agents.

“Cyborgs and companion species each bring together the human and non-human, the organic and technological, carbon and silicon, freedom and structure, history and myth, the rich and the poor, the state and the subject, diversity and depletion, modernity and postmodernity, and nature and culture in unexpected ways.”

Using inspirations from theory such as Haraway, and fiction – such as Philip Pullman’s ‘Daemons’ from his ‘Dark Materials’ books – we can perhaps imagine a near-future that is richer and weirder than the current share-everything-all-the-time/total-gamified-personal-productivity obsessions of silicon valley.

A future of digital daemons would be one of close relationships with software that learned and acted intuitively – perhaps inscrutably at first, but with a maxim of ‘do no harm, with maximum charm’…

Read the rest of Berg London’s snippet of ‘Companion Species’.

With my mobile, as highlighted in a piece about contextual UIs at my personal website, there’s this interpleay between the context of my environment (day, night, connection of Bluetooth accessories, etc.) which alters the state of my mobile. Even so much that its basically now a matter of “just keeping it fed” with power of cellular connectivity, that makes it just as much a living accessory to my life as it does a tool to enable activities. I can see this perspective that a mobile is very much adapting and adjusting to its environment, and I’m its caretaker. Which leads me to wonder what implications that has when it is a tool for more than just notification of some communication event.

A Perspective
The reading that comes to mind is found in Genesis 1:28:

And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”

The materials that make up mobiles are found in the earth. The ores and knitting together of them by electrons and other ingenoius methods have made something that was once not “living” into something so attached ot our daily lives that to some degree, it is now given life. We speak to our mobiles and they respond (Apple’s Siri as a recent example). We personalize them custom ringtones, themes, and such. Then we add abilities to them with the applications we install (like that scene in the Matrix where Neo was trained by simply downloading the knowledge into his brain). They aren’t sentient, but there is some aspect of stewardship to these devices that very much mimics how we manage our associations with animals and other entities on this planet.

But, mobiles aren’t like this you say? Aren’t they? Don’t you cradle your’s in a case, maybe even a near-personalized one? Perhaps you went for a lesser case for the mobile, but have that custom ringtone or ring-back tone – you know, that song that’s createed by you, or has some knd of meaning because its like someone or something close to you? Wallpapers, alert settings, even the arrangemetn of the apps that you use, carefully curated and managed on something that doesn’t live… or does it?

I’m not making the argument that at some point devices will be much more llife-like. In some respects, they will be, and they won’t be called mobiles. But, in the methods and behaviors of use that we have, there is this almost lfe-like attention we pay to them as if they were compensated assistants. To that, we must ask the question that goes beyond tools to something more like accountability and stewardship – if your mobile could talk about you, what would it say about how you’ve treated it and what you do with it?

 

All Books Project on Github

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

All Books Screenshot
I’ve added my All Books Project to Github for those who might be interested in taking a look as to what I’ve been working on. Right now, that’s just the UX. I’ll get the ReadMe and Wiki updated in time.

As of now, I’m not really planning to do much more to it before I finish some lessons with JavaScript and figure out the speed issues on my Nokia N8. But, if you’ve got ideas, or want to jump in, well, there it is.

Oh… the colors, measurements, and arrangement is all for a reason. That all comes in the documentation… stay tuned.