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Books, The Printing Press & Facebook

I. In an aural/story telling culture knowledge was tied to relationship, experience & time
(the teacher passed on what he or she knew through time spent together)
(there was interaction around a shared experience or task)
(there was mentoring and apprenticeship)

II. The book captured knowledge & allowed it to be transferred without relationship, mentoring or discussion.
(the author/teacher did not have to be present)
(only content is presented)
(you can glean knowledge without relationship or synthesis through discussion)
(you get a slice of the author’s meaning; without direct interaction you only have
your perspective of what the author is saying; you cannot know for sure…at every level)

III. The printing press extended this
(knowledge > w/o interaction)
(interpretations change as contexts effecting the reader vary widely)
(with travel limitations & sheer #’s of people there is no way that everyone can get to the author)

…discussion declines
…civility declines
…relationships decline
…the ability to mentor declines.

*Discussion didn’t go away but it seems that it had/has to at some levels be worked for. Interaction around knowledge takes determination and intent. (book club, small group, seminar, class)

*Could the book/printing press in some ways have helped  give rise to the importance of the charismatic speaker (especially in the church world)? Is there a longing for learning/knowledge that is tied to a personality? Is this really a longing for mentoring?

? My Main Question: Does Social Space Help Bring These Things Back?
1. Today, people get a book or get interested in a book and connect with the author through a blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc.
2. Authors often respond and discuss with their followers/commenters/readers.
3. Affinity groups are all over the internet…everything from groups that gather to discuss trading cards, novelty cars, 0r _______________ (your hobby…I bet there is a group out there.)
4. Facebook and Twitter make gathering geographically or in social space really really easy. Discussion is almost asked for on Facebook by it’s structure.
5. We now have a generation where 84% have immediate access to devices which allow for connection.
6. We are surrounded opportunities to interact and collaborate.

So…If Discussion and interaction is making a comeback, how do we ensure that there is also civility and hospitality. Are there ways to foster relationships and mentoring?

30 Seconds of Reading & I NEED Your Thoughts! (Please :)

If a 1st Place is where you live,
(personal space)

a 2nd Place is where you work,
(productive space)

And a 3rd Place is where you hang out or play
(neutral space),

What is Social Space?
(i.e. Facebook, Twitter or a blog)

Is it a 4th Place or is it a cross section of some or all of the first three spaces?

Ready? Go!

 

iPad Essentials


My usage of my iPad is really evolving. When I went to Fuller two weeks ago for two weeks of class, I only took my iPad. This was a big test for it.  Would I be able to capture notes in class and do work that I needed to do for tasks back home…plus staying connected. I even had thought through how I would get Mer to ship my MacBook to me if I got in a bind. I didn’t. The iPad actually was amazing and was much lighter to carry around than my MacBook. It wasn’t perfect and there were a few moment where I had to work around issues or make adjustments but for the most part, the majority of the time, I had no issue.

The iPad got me through the two weeks of travel. But it didn’t come without some investment & tweaking. So, here are my essential apps and I guess hardware & how I’m using them.

Hardware:

Bluetooth Keyboard: Anyone who has an iPad knows that you can type short items on it but anything over a paragraph for me becomes too tedious on the pop-up/on screen keyboard. So several months back I bought the bluetooth keyboard. It’s incredibly light; it’s easy to connect & works great. It’s well worth the $$.

Pogo Sketch Pen/Stylus: This was one of the surprises of my trip. I had some money left on an Apple gift card & I picked up this little jewel for $15. It allowed me to sketch notes during my classes (think diagrams & such). I am now using it in teaching during our worship gathering. I Love It!

iPad to VGA Connector: This was my second purchase on the trip that really changes how I’m using my iPad. This connecter allows me to plug straight in to a projector (or switcher) and now instead of using the Keynote Remote app I’m actually just running my Keynote from the iPad version. I can easily switch between Keynote, Penultimate (the sketch app) and Prezi or several other apps that work on extended screens. This has been great for teaching and really fun. I draw on my iPad and it shows up on the screen. Me likey!

Apps:

Keynote for iPad: $10 version of the larger software that has so far done everything that I need it to do. I even did some more intricate work on my MacBook this past week & sent it over to my iPad (including videos) (through DropBox) and it worked perfectly. I am completely switched over now from that Microsoft product.

Logos for iPad: Best Bible research software out there period. And to be honest, I like my iPad version better than my Mac version.

Penultimate: Sketch app that will capture the screen when you use a connector so what you draw on the sketchpad shows on the screen. It has multiple export options which is really nice.

Toodledo: A Task manager. Syncs with my phone & computer. Simple. Clean. Works.

LiveStrong: There may be better trackers out there but this one has worked really well for me on my latest weight loss journey (only 7 more pounds to go :)

Yelp: A must if you travel and I love that they have integrated Open Table. Yelp has not led me astray on a food choice yet.

Netflix for iPad: You know what this one is. I stream movies more than the Mississippi streams water. I love this app and not for behind it is Hulu Plus. I was skeptical at first about the cost but it allows us to watch shows we want when we can. This has been worth it – think treadmill and after 8:30 time when the Guice children are in bed & the old Guice’s catch upon TV & reading & such.

Dropbox & ZumoDrive: Cloud services that I use. I love them both equally but Dropbox seems to be more readily available & connected to other apps.

Evernote: The one app that I couldn’t live without. It is the ultimate note, image, memo, voice memo capturing app. If you are a teacher, you’ve got to have this one. And I love the syncing. My ideas and moments are available everywhere I can get to the internet.

QuickOffice: Spreadsheets, PDF’s, Documents, Presentations. Syncs with DropBox & Google Docs (opens Microsoft & Apple versions of the afore mentioned files)

PlanningCenterOnline: For planning our worship gatherings. They’ve done a bang up job with this one.

AudioNote: Capture Audio and add typed or written notes with time signatures so you know when they were in the lecture/teaching/recording.

Reeder: My favorite RSS feed reader. I’ve tried a bunch and this one just works for me. Handles a large number of feeds well and meets all of my needs for sending the posts/articles to other services like Instapaper.

Instapaper: A life saver when you want to be able to read posts offline. I scan a couple of hundred posts every day and send the ones I’m interested in to Instapaper where they are ready for me whether I’m online or not.

Kindle: Wow…the money you’ve saved me & now you have page numbers! I buy every book that I can on Kindle & have not regretted it once. I’m helping trees, not buying more bookshelves, saving all kinds of money on books, the list goes on & on.

PhotoShare: A cheap little app that let’s me connect phone to iPad & swap pics without going through iPhoto.

AirSharing: For moving files around between machines.

Splashtop: For remote accessing my MacBook and even watching video that streams on my MacBook…on my iPad.

GV Connect: I text & call through my voice account on my iPad. Saves me when I’m in a situation where a phone is inappropriate or I may not be getting mobile service. And Finally…

SkyFire: A web browser that converts some (actually a lot of) flash movies into HTML 5 so that you can watch them on the iPad. I have been really impressed by how many sites that it actually converts flash files so that you can view them. It also has very nicely integrated Facebook and Twitter feeds + numerous sharing mechanisms. This is by far my favorite iPad browser. I do wish it had real tabs though.

That’s it. I’d love to know what apps you can’t do with out.

Peace ~

wm

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