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Mobile Ministry Magazine

Seeing mobile technology through the lens of Scripture

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Welcome and thank you for visiting Mobile Ministry Magazine. Here, we explore the use of mobile technology and how it can be used by ministers, missionaries, and many others as a means to augment their abilities to share the Gospel. Read more about our mission to educate and edify at the intersection of faith and technology.

If you have any questions or comments, or would like to partner with us contact us and let's till this ground together.

Thursday, September 04, 2008

Tilting and Bumping Interfaces for Bible Readers

One of the new aspects of play that I have had with mobile devices lately has come through the Nokia N95 and a piece of hardware/software called the accelerometer. The Accelerometer is basically a sensor within the device that senses when it has changed positions on the X, Y, and Z-axis and then orients the screen accordingly.

Those of you with the iPhone will know this feature as being the same thing as when you hold the device in its normal portrait mode, but then tilt to landscape for web or email viewing. The N95 also has this feature, and its something that when I unlocked it with a few applications, it got me thinking again about mobile Bible readers.

One of the common issues I hear with mobile bible readers is the screen resolution. For many people, the text is too small to read, but just right to look up a phone number (go figure). For some others, the buttons are designed for quick presses and therefore are uncomfortable for a reading mode.

Some browsers have seen this issue and have adopted a pan and zoom feature. For example, Opera Mini, Nokia's S60 Web Browser and Apple's Safari Mobile have this feature where you can view the whole of a web page as it would look on a desktop, but then zoom in to a section that you'd like to read.

The benefits of this is that you get some of the feel of the large page, but the compactness of the content fitting the screen that you are looking at. Now, what if that same idea, plus the accelerometer were applied to a mobile bible reader.

Let's give a usage case and then hear some thoughts from you:
- Open the Bible Reader and you are presented with two panes: last read verses and recent bookmarks
- Clicking on Last Read Verses you are taken to a zoomed out page with the focus square (the area that you can zoom into) on the verse that you chose
- The view is a nearly traditional four column, 42-line view (mimicing the page view that many are familiar with)
- Zoom in and the content is reflowed to fit the mobile screen for that specific verse with a line from the previous verse and a line from the next verse if the screen permits
- To scroll one tilts the device up or down, moving the Bible a verse up or down (an optional setting to allow it to move an entire screen, multiple verses, or off)
- For added fun, tapping the camera will indicate that a bookmark is to be made for that verse and a new screen pops up with that specific dialogue

Again, this is just a thought after having played with the programs FlipSlient and RockNScroll on my N95. What do you think of immersing the electronic bible reading experience with a few subtle actions such as described above?

Post created with alpha version of WordPy for Internet Tablets (please excuse any formatting issues)

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

A Mobile-Empowered Seminary Training Portfolio

One of the comments in the virtual seminary post a few days back has me thinking a bit. As a person who has not (yet) taken any seminary classes, the idea of having classes that are virtual are quite appealing. Besides the ease in scheduling, it would also allow for the use and exploration of various types of mobile tech needs on both the student and teaching sides of things.

Ignoring the IT side of things - that would be better served for another post - what would a seminary training portfolio that encouraged the use of mobile tech (web-based apps, smartphones, laptops, etc.) look like?

Depending on the depth of the responses, this is something that MMM could consider sending to seminaries for further thought and opinion, and maybe some kind of initiation towards enablement on their side of things.

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Friday, June 13, 2008

Virtual Seminaries

Just wanting to put this out there for discussion and thought (and something that can lead to a post that is a bit more researched and thought out).

- To those of you who are in, have done, or are looking towards going to seminary, does the ability to go mobile with some aspects of your learning appeal to you?

- To those who have done seminary, are there ares which would have been better served with a more flexible virtual setting than the classroom/set-schedule one that you had?

- And if you are one that doesn't see a need for seminary; why?

Thanks in advance for your responses.

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