Monday, December 1, 2008

Fun Things #2 - Discovering a New Community (Part 3 - Hello to Plurk)

Last blog, I discussed fun with Twitter. Back in July the SQPN'ers discovered a new social network called Plurk. This site had a few neat features unlike others: a unique timeline and the ability to make each entry a discussion thread. Within a matter of days virtually all the SQPN'ers migrated to Plurk as their main means of staying in touch.

Plurk is a great new site where I met many new friends in addition to those who moved over from Twitter.

˙ʞɔıɹʇ ʇxǝʇ sıɥʇ op oʇ ʍoɥ ǝɯ ʇɥƃnɐʇ spuǝıɹɟ ʍǝu ʇsɹıɟ ʎɯ ɟo ǝuo

Of course, I've learned many other interesting things from my Plurk friends. I am friends with 70 plurkers (as of today). Many are either podcasters associated with SQPN or SQPN fans or are friends of SQPN fans. All great people from all over the world!

Give it a try at www.plurk.com.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Fun Things #2 - Discovering a New Community (Part 2 - Twitter was Fun While it Lasted)

Once I listened to several SQPN podcasts (e.g. Daily Breakfast, Rosary Army, ipadre, Saintcast, Technopriest), I discovered the "SQPN groupies" A.K.A. the dedicated fans of SQPN podcasters. A whole community of podcast listeners from every continent of the world communicates with each other using internet social networks. Initially Facebook was a common connecting point (I myself never got into Facebook; not sure if it was the interface), but once the podcasters began to speak of Twitter frequently, Twitter became a primary connecting point. Indeed, it was Twitter which introduced me to the broader SQPN community.

The term "microblog" best describes Twitter. Members give 140 character "status updates" to the question: "What are you doing?". Whoever you invite to follow your tweets as a friend receives a continuous feed of your status updates.

Eventually I got to "meet" several members "one way" via Ustream, as several podcasters would compile their podcasts while also Ustreaming. Father Roderick (Daily Breakfast), for example, often left his Ustream camera running for a 24 hour period, and SQPN fans would watch him go about his day podcasting, organizing bills, assembling IKEA furniture, cooking, eating lunch, moving furniture, unboxing computer gadgets, playing video games, or whatever.

Those planning to Ustream post the upcoming time on Twitter, and whoever receives the notice "gather" in the Ustream chat room of the moment. Once the Ustream session begins, the host of the Ustream responds verbally to the scrolling text conversation of the chatroom audience. Ustreams can be recorded for others to see later.

For a 2-month period I was an active poster on Twitter, following the tweets of ~20 twitters. Twitter use curtailed in July 2008 when Plurk became (and continues to be at present) the favoured social networking tool of the SQPN community. This of course, is frequently supplemented with Ustream gatherings. Twitter was nifty, but during a one week period at the beginning of July 2008, most SQPN'ers migrated to Plurk en masse. Some still passively Tweet using tools such as Ping.fm or hellotxt which post status updates to many social networks at the same time. Because Plurk allows each status update to be a conversation thread, this feature has made Plurk the most popular way to communicate (along with its library of emoticons to add pizzazz to the conversation). Plurking is addictive and one can pass several hours a day on it if not careful! Occasionally sleep patterns are altered when one stays up too late plurking with a friend halfway around the world!

SQPN'ers who live close enough geographically visit each other at a "meet up" (occassionally Ustreaming to others). In June 2008, SQPN held a Catholic New Media Celebration and many SQPN'ers met each other in Atlanta, Georgia. (I hope to go in 2009 to meet many of my online friends in person).

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Fun Things #2 - Discovering a New Community (Part 1)

Last post, I mentioned the fun I had discovering and sampling new podcasts. I was specifically looking for some fresh devotional material, and in addition to some excellent bible podcasts, my surfing led me to some unexpected treasures.

I explored many interesting academic podcasts and then I focused on a few personal interests left over from my part time seminary studies at Canadian Bible College/Canadian Theological Seminary: history of the early church and basics of New Testament Greek, which I keep dabbling in. (Earlier in the fall of 2007, I treated myself to a new reference text, William D. Mounce's Interlinear for the Rest of Us: the Reverse Interlinear for New Testament Word Studies [2005]).

I don't recall how I stumbled across a strange sounding podcast called Rosary Army, but I tried it and discovered a fun podcast put out by a couple named Greg & Jennifer Willits. They serve in a ministry that gives twine Rosaries (donated by listeners) to anyone who asks for one and teaches anyone how to make one. From this, it was but a few mouse clicks to discover Daily Breakfast, a lively talk show by a priest named Father Roderick Vonhögen from the Netherlands.

Father Roderick happens to be the CEO of SQPN.com, an award winning production company of dozens of Catholic podcasts, videos, and other "new media" productions. Around the time that I began listening to his podcast, I was stunned to hear him doing a "sound seeing" tour on the podcast during a trip to Canada that brought him right to my current city of Winnipeg. I enjoyed listening to his live commentary during a Manitoba Moose hockey game in Winnipeg's MTS Centre, as well as at other Winnipeg sites: The Forks (junction of the Red & Assiniboine Rivers) St. Boniface Cathedral, and St. Mary's Cathedral. Unfortunately, I discovered these podcasts after the fact and missed the opportunity to meet Fr. R. at any of his speaking engagements held in Winnipeg.

In a later blog, I'll explain how yours truly, a "mongrel" evangelical Christian (NABC Baptist/BGC Baptist/Christian & Missionary Alliance/Mennonite), discovered a new community of evangelical Catholic Christian friends (and their other non-Catholic Christian fans) via this new media.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Fun Things - #1 - ipod Nano

In November or December 2007 I finally caved and purchased my first apple ipod, a silver 4GB Nano. I loved it! After the initial excitement of transferring music CD's (mostly Christian soft rock), I quickly discovered the world of podcasts, which I started to listen to while waiting during errands, or while walking in the evenings. Within a matter of months, 4GB storeage simply wasn't enough, and I purchased a second 8GB Nano in a funky (and slightly irritating irridescent torquise blue). Some of the first podcasts that I enjoyed were: Global National Evening News [Video] (how cool to watch the news on the nano screen in bed just before falling asleep), The Bible Postcast (one chapter per day narrated by Michael Lee), the Dramatized NIV Audio Bible (one chapter per day), CBC's Quirks & Quarks (a science show), GodTalk (featured segments from a weekly local radio call-in show), even sermons from my church were available via podcast!

Soon I had more podcasts downloaded than I could reasonably listen to... I had to manually sync from those stored in iTunes on my PC to the Nano. There were hundreds to choose from. If I ever had trouble sleeping, I'd listen to podcasts and drift off, only occasionally scrunching one ear or another as the earbuds eventually fell out.

Eventually I discovered a new website featuring all sorts of neat podcasts, which I will tell about next.

About this Blog

This blog is an experiment, not sure where it will go. Want to focus it on the positive aspects of life (hence the title...savouring life...) as there are struggles aplenty, eh? Stay tuned.