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Saturday, May 17, 2008

The Ultimate Internet Tablet Setup

Every week, I go through this decision process where I try and figure out how to use the Internet Tablet as my main device. Truthfully, it would not beee so hard if I didn't have such big screens around. But this morning, I thought about it a bit more, and wanted to compose my thoughts as to my ideal setup.

First off, I would have the Internet Tablet as a Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) device. Because it has the two SD slots, I would use both for two 32GB memory cards. That would be enough for most of the music I have and other data. I would use a program like noBounds to export the image to my TV screen for when I want to use the Internet Tablet to watch TV (cartoons, movies, and sports - all streamed). And then I would have a slew of networked wireless speakers throughout the house so that I can keep the music in play without having to carry the Internet Tablet around all the time.

Now, what I would carry around would be my mobile phone. It would connect to the Internet Tablet through a secure wireless connection and play like a universal remote control. However, if I were to get a call, I could choose to pump it to the Internet Tablet in a room designed to hold phone conversations for privacy and freedom of movement.

Of course, to do this would require a ton of setup and energy. Though right now, I have just an apartment, and so it would probably work very well. Given the low power requirements of the IT and attached devices, I could move to using some sort of solar charging system where I can store energy as it hits my side of the apartment so that I am not always pulling directly from the grid. What I would also like is the ability to wireless and solar charge my Internet Tablet. That way, I can use it not only in hand and in house, but it could be taken in the car too as a replacement for that; or even on my bicycle as a navigator and media aid for longer rides.

There really is a lot of potential with this platform, and I'm itching to see what can come next. In the meantime though, I sit in front of it typing on a Bluetooth keyboard and listening to last.fm via Canola (streamed over the Internet using my phone as a bluetooth modem). This kind of setup tends to keep me in front of people, but makes its own private space. Very versatile, and very forward thinking wouldn't you say.

Labels: mobility

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Friday, May 16, 2008

Raw Truth

I read a lot. Today, I've read more than I've written. This is usually the case because I compile a lot of energy to come to points of writing for the various places I am heard or not heard. But I read something today, an aside to an article about Internet Tablets and the price reduction that happened yesterday, that was raw, and more so than most things I've read (ever), has given me a sober pause about the near future of life as I know it...

...In other words, the chances of technology saving you from the coming economic collapse are about the same as the chances of another virgin-birth taking place.

For you or any other "average" person to expect high-tech solutions to save you from the economic effects of Peak Oil is akin to a person living in sub-Saharan Africa to expect high-tech medical treatments to save their community from the effects of AIDS. These treatments are only available and affordable for super-wealthy people like Magic Johnson, not the average people in Africa...

All that I can really say that its just amazing, and raw. I've always suspected, and had the theory in my head for a long time; but to read such raw truth (this is what I am calling it as I cannot verify it all just yet) is sobering.

The only answer that I have is to say: find Christ now. Given a few happenings, there's not much else that can save you. Tech ain't the answer, nor beefing with friends and family. Christ is. That's the only miracle I know that has been received and approved by the foundations of this world.

As much as I'd hope for something else to be said or done, I can only point you to Him.

Labels: commentary

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Revolutioning Blogging By Going Micro and Mobile

Was in the mist of reading some posts at Jaiku as I have been occupied most of the day, and one of the user's commented on the starting of his new website, The Thumb Report (read the entire intro at IntoMobile). Basically a tech news website, with each story no more than 160 characters long. Brilliant idea, and one where I am honestly saying that in terms of the blog, and the way its populated that it should be copied by many churches who are looking for a simple solution towards creating a place online that is not just easy to update, but easy to read and go.

Check out The Thumb Report to see what I am saying. Remember, when it comes to connecting with people, simplicity matters (yes, I am verbose, I know :P ) Read More

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

It's Not the Hardware, It's the User Experience That's Broken

Image: Nokia N800 Internet Tablet, via Brighthand

I wax a good deal of my conversations here about the user experience of mobile devices. It's an important point though. We are at the place where mobile devices are more than just attachments to our lifestyle, but they are elements of it. For that reason, software design has to pick up the pace in terms of getting to the point of solving user's issues in an elegant manner.

My latest editorial at Brighthand points out that despite what you read in the newspaper and in reviews, you don't need more hardware or features, but just software that works according to how it was designed to be used. Here is a snippet:

...I say all of this not to bemoan the hardware. Every mobile device sold today has the ability to do everything and more, and do it simply. The problem is the software. Between short-sighted hobby developers, lack of code and user interface standards, and a general lack of discernible direction from major companies, its no wonder the iPhone was a breath of fresh air...

Read the entire editorial at Brighthand. And think about it like this, would you purchase a car knowing that the wheels needed to be aligned every time you wanted to talk it on a different type of road (highway, dirt, hills, city, etc.); you just want to drive and go. The same should be true for mobile devices, the hardware is here to travel far, but there is far too much that is not "just do."

Labels: Brighthand, mobility

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Poem: Present Pushy, Future Awaiting

This is the last poem for the compliation A New Beginning; its quite fitting for it to end on this note.



A future awaits when care and manipulation are no longer thrown
A future awaits them whose hearts have found a true home
Them whose breaks are caught by acknowledging the missing 't'
Them whose mistakes are now erased in heart, and yet for eternity
Now erased are the marks that left one or a many scorned
Now erased to produce a new picture of life born because of pruning
A new picture of death that meant two more would have life
A new picture where the present pushes resurrection instead of crucifixion.

No more crying
No more makeup over tears
No more being followed by well wishers
But really people-pleasing peers
No more instant responses
No more deleted remarks
No more overpowering dreams
Just realized words manifested of a new relationship at the seams
No more uttering
Just plain speech
No more undercutting
Just giving everyone their words for a living peach
No more falling away
Just leadership in distinction
A picture of amazing grace realized
With no more plotting of deception
Keeping it in memory that the past was tense
But when the present pushed
It was an altar that was built next
To leave a legacy of those that would follow here
Trusting in God for a future awaiting
To walk off the pages as Jesus did.

Labels: poem

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Poem: Past Tense, Present Pushy

This lies beneath the when and the where
Where I last stared at my own cooked cat in the mirror
Mirroring the actions of whom I thought did right
Right alongside every fancy that took flight
Flight delays never meant much till they stayed
Stayed home because there was no less guilt to play
Play with my own because there was no love left to display
Display the past tense hoping it would go away.

Far be it from me to see all that is
Far be the coin that drops for yet another remake
Be that as it may its got a scratch
Be that tone played in a melancholy melody
That was the sound of the past going, going, gone
That was a pound, drowned hearts from the weight
Was the statement that in the end heaven would not forsake
Was the statement made clear faster when the present got pushy in its wake
The statement is what it is no when, where or why
The statement stands for what it does, a future awaits.

Labels: poem

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Monday, May 12, 2008

Catching Up With an Old Friend

Probably not the best place to go admiting some things, but I recently ran into - as best as the Internet allows that to happen - an old friend from college. I think that the more amazing part of just seeing that she is still alive was just me remembering why I like some musicians more than others. Some people just have an energy about them that is... memorable.

Image: Polumey, via Polymer website

My old friend is a member of the group Polymer. I vaguely remember the last time in talking with her where she was in the processing of starting to work with a Philly-local band. This was probably the band, but I don't remmeber. I just thought that it was cool to see a person with a great heart for life go into something with a lot of passion.

I should probably interject that it didn't help that she was cute then (and now according to the pics on the website) and was just a engaging personality to have a conversation with. Ah, memories...

But anways, I found it really neat that instant messaging can give you that feeling of just bumping into someone. Sure, its not the whole I saw such and such while at a random supermarket; but its cool nonetheless. And to think, this old friend is a rockin musician. Very cool.

Wonder what my best friend would say in finding out that he was not the first drummer that I could hang out with, lol.

Related Sites:

Polymer (official band website)

Labels: music

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Sunday, May 11, 2008

Fear and Faith on the Internet

Compared to many people I know, I have not been on the Internet very long. My first experience was with the Netscape browser on a Mac OS 8.something device in my junior year of highschool. Since that time, I've done the Netscape to Internet Exploer to Firefox move; the all in one desktop to a tower to the mini tower to the laptop to the PDA to the smarpthone move; and several other notes of evolving as the Internet too has grown.

However, there is one thing that has not changed much since I got involved with cyberspace; fear and faith drives a lot of what is done and read here.

The Fears

Even when I graduated from college in 2002, there were professors saying that "you cannot trust the Internet unless a person with a Ph.D. wrote it. People spoke about being afraid that the Internet would take over ever aspect of life and that the next world war would be a digial one. Churches shunned the Internet because of that old '666' thought. And don't be a person that wears glasses that knows how to fix these things; a woman was bound to run away from you for fear that she too would become "one of them."

We shouldn't be surprised though. Things that are new rarely evoke feelings of security in the minds of those used to the way things are. Every day that I walk out the the apartment and "take my office with me" I am reminded that innovation is marked by discomfort. Its not a bad thing, and there is a right to be apprehensive towards change, but to outright fear it for misunderstanding - well that is not something that I expect from anyone, let alone an academic.

The Faith

Then there are those "true believers." Every move the Internet has had them. The latest is probably those that are using mobile devices to access the Internet and finding that the world is a lot more accessible than it seems. Sure, outside of the iPhone you rarely hear anyone except those pioneers talking about it, but its true that the mobile web has done a lot to restore the faith that there is still much to discover about the Internet and its interaction in our lives.

Faith without direction though is something to be noted. Faith can drive you to do some amazing things; without direction it leads the fear to grow faster than the faith that preceeded it. Faith is saying "ooh, I can talk to another computer by just typing this." Fear happens when talking to another computer becomes "hey, my idenity is stolen, and its the carrier's fault." Both fear and faith need to be respected, but for such a new paradigm, the faith in the Internet needed to be pushed more than its fears.

The Critique

And this is where I have an issue with this article recently published at Reuters. A professor has rightly acertained that there are more people and more ways to access the Internet than ever before. However, he makes the wrong conclusion on the matter by blaming the devices, specifically mobile devices, where he should be pointing them to do something more than what they are doing. Mobile devices are no more locked down, virus laden/producing, or restrictive than computers ever were. But to say that the innovative spirit that created the personal computing genre is dimished because of them reaks of a person who's paradigm for doing life has just been rocked. He's afraid that the Internet will change before he's gotten used to it. I get that; and I totally understand.

And yet as much as I understand, I stand on the point that mobile devices, the Internet, and innovation will continue to evolve. Just as ever mass media element has done before it. Things will evolve and then something new will happen. There's no reason to be afraid of change, only to have faith that the lessons from past innovations will go into making the world around us something worth interacting more with.

Labels: commentary, mobility

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Friday, May 09, 2008

Poem: Sending Inspiration Your Way

Those lips I dare not arouse
Those eyes I dare not espouse
Taste not
Touch not
Only remind myself that there is something over there worth more
Tear myself from the page just for a second longer
Before my longings for bits and bytes turn surreal
And then I inspire another moment
To steal away on my knees
Reminded of the better passion
Those lips that did respond
Those eyes that did not stare
Touched me even though I was not there
I tasted every word as my own
For me
He took all that to inspire me

Labels: poem

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Thursday, May 08, 2008

Poem: Polar Panda Dances

Find me a polar opposite
Where the ends meet in chewed leaves and strength
Near the place where the sun meets my toes
And we dance in the east, far from history's guess
Find me hugging a panda
Where the nights and days are long and hugged
Near the place where hairy meets smiles
And we dance in the forest, where electronic bits plant our music.

Labels: poem

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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

From Innovation to Lifestyle

Looking at my portfolio I am starting to finally realize that there is a pattern to things that is kind of neat, but also has made for some clarity in a few areas recently. One thing is that I have moved away from abstract web design to more functional designs. But the more important one is that I've moved from just innovating for the sake of it to actively making functional innovation a part of my lifestyle.

Now, when I say innovation being functional, I mean more than just having the shiny and new because its shiny and new. I mean taking advantage of the current technology in such a way that my life and the lives of those around me is enriched when they engage with me.

When I started doing web design, it was just a matter of learning; seeing what I could learn and apply to get the message of Christ out online in ways that were distinctive yet effective. And as the web and web building tools matured, so have I. The goal being the same, but now the innovations push beyond just doing to actually creating the place for innovation to change my life and the lives of those around me.

In the MMM Mobile Experiment Report I see this very clearly. There is almost no need for someone living in the US to have any need of a mobile device to access the web. For the most part, terminals are large and cheap enough that nearly anyone can have some type of access somewhere. There is even less of a need for someone to carry a web server around with them. These are things that while possible, to do speaks towards the innovation that our society has allowed to happen.

But I want it to go past that. What happens when mobile access is an issue of team building and discipleship. What happens when people who were once next door and doing ministry are now separated by "the pond." How does one get over the hurdle of language and cultural differences that affluence and technology instantly cause. These are questions that would seem removed from lifestyle, but for me they are becoming things that I address in my everyday use and push of web and mobile.

The more interesting thing in looking at that portfolio is how I've grown to include more people in sharing those things that are innovative, and taking more advantages to share pieces of the character of Christ in all of those areas. The price I sometimes pay for this innovation is loneliness; but every once and a while there is someone whose life is enriched directly or indirectly because I took a step out of my box to see what lies beyond the horizon. The future holds a lot, and this kind of exploration and discovery of what it means to connect with one another seems to be what innovation meeting lifestyle is all about.

Related Articles:

Labels: commentary

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Monday, May 05, 2008

Coffeehouse Alone

There is this rule it seems about coffeehouses here, after a certain point in the day they get from being places of laptops and workers, to places where hands and hugs take in the aroma. No biggie for most people, but in sitting at a usual spot, its a pang that hit kind of hard a few minutes ago. And spiced chai tea lattes just don't seem to make things alright.

Having had a few of these moments in the past months, I think I can adjust to the moving from place to place avoiding the aroma for just a bit longer. But like anything, the smell eventually gets to your nose and it has to be addressed. Haven't found one worth spending more than a half a cup of coffee with though.

Its all about the smell. I was telling someone this weekend that attraction comes with nice smells. Other than some artifical jaunts, I have not smelled anything attractive since being down here. I would assume that I am not in the right coffeehouses, and some could argue that with me. But my is the scene such the Starbucks moment - losts of money for lots of flair but the taste is not worth the affair.

I should probably stop thinking about this and continue to sip my chai tea latte. I enjoy these on Mondays rather than other days because of their smooth and robust flavor. Its not one that begs to be taken care of, but a smell that invites conversation.

Would this prose end with someone to take the last sip from my cup; or in my finishing yet another Monday find peace in the moon and stars once again, instead of the flavor of the moment.
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Sunday, May 04, 2008

Where Are Ya

Here and there, writing a big review about the MMM Mobile Experiment, and just taking in people in the area. What else should I be doing...

Then again, I could be here again ;) [image]

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Friday, May 02, 2008

Experiments and Mobile

I am considering this post to be in one part an experiment. Blogger has released a new feature called scheduled posting where you can write a post and then schedule it to automatically post on a future date and time. I am starting this a bit before 10am and will just see how it rolls out. This is a feature that I've wanted for sometime, and it brings some value back into Blogger for me as a publishing platform. That being said, I still am looking at moving on to something a bit more mobile...

For the last week I have been doing an experiment on MMM where I am using Nokia's Mobile Web Server as a blogging and communications platform. For MMM, its a nice idea, but something that needs a bit more refinement. For me though, it could be something worthwhile to do considering all the other ways that I connect with people while connected/online.

Basically, I would be archiving all that I do here and going to use the MWS only. There would be a page here that lists the badge to the MWS as well as archives of the Blogger posts, and then the connect page (because it took so long to build and refine that, I am not getting rid of it). For me, it makes me very mobile once again; for you, well, depending on whom you are, there becomes a better way for my website to be a place of personal musings and such.

Unfortunately, this is not something that I can do right now. The mobile device that I have while good for this, lacks some hardware abilities that would make such a move easier. Considering also that I am a nut about connectivity, I would want to make sure that a few other things are settled. That being said, this is something under heavy consideration and I am most likely going that route in a non-experimental mode.

In talking to my friend till 2am last night, we got back on that subject of being the kind of church that is distinctive; I see what I have done with MMM over the last week, and what I will do here as an enabler into that. Whether that leads more people to Christ or not I don't know. But in terms of those things mobile and connecting, I am doing what I am designed to do, tripping all the way to some end that God has planned. I don't know His plan, only that I am in it and subject to it. That makes it fun to try stuff like this, and then respond to the world around me in a manner that speaks like the knowledge of Him that has been written on our hearts.

Labels: commentary, mobility

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Thursday, May 01, 2008

Poem: Looking for a Change in Tempo

Suffering from another storm of melancholy melodies
I stared long enough into the wind to see a promise
The songstress’ heart towards happier times has me questioning trust
And dare as it may the sun makes its play
Only to reassure me that I need better beats and rhythm
The musings of this humming bird found me as I lay
Darkened overtones being replaced by salsa
Yet the promise of a dance partner seems to me overwhelming as I watch the finished storms of others
Apparently this is my take for the breeze
To be content in a melody such as this
To stare into the eyes of an impending summer
To no longer have to apologize for feeling like this

Labels: poem

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MMM/Inner-Linked

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Visit Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM) to learn and explore about the intersection of faith and mobile technology.

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Visit Inner-Linked to learn how I can help you or your church/organization better utilize mobile technology and web resources.

 

Jaiku

 


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