Thoughts?
Are you having a “ministry” Super Bowl Party?
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
Thoughts?
Are you having a “ministry” Super Bowl Party?
At first it was a tad bit confusing on how exactly Notational Velocity really worked but the moment I started using it I was hooked. Here’s what they say about themselves:
Notational Velocity is an application that stores and retrieves notes.
It is an attempt to loosen the mental blockages to recording information and to scrape away the tartar of convention that handicaps its retrieval. The solution is by nature nonconformist.
And it truly is nonconformist. I imagine that more than a few people will really enjoy this new take on note taking. Take a look and let me know what you think. It’s free to try and use and completely Open Source!
Marketing is an interesting concept within (and without) the walls of the church – we don’t like to call it “marketing” but that’s what is functionally happening.
Once you get over the hump of semantics and cultural interpretations you move to a place that gives you freedom to execute, which is always a good spot. Here are 4 general marketing strategies that you should consider this year in your efforts to grow your ministry, both spiritually and numerically:
This hour-long presentation by Linus Torvalds on GIT was referenced in this thread here and it’s worth noting explicitly. It’s an oldie but goodie.
If you’re looking for a great on-going conversation and explanation of GIT and Subversion then there’s a thread currently running that is pretty darn robust on Stack Exchange.
Check out the thread here and bookmark that for future reference. Stack Exchange is awesome.
by Tom
I spent the majority of my college career exclusively using Linux.
Although I don’t use it much anymore (mainly because priorities have changed), I’m still a big fan of the operating system and think it’s great just how easy it’s become for the mainstream.
This past weekend, I came across a slick way to install a full Ruby on Rails environment in Ubuntu with a single command:
[Read more…] about Installing Ruby on Rails with One Line in Ubuntu