Thoughts?
It’s been newly redesigned with the help of @BrandonCox.
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
Thoughts?
It’s been newly redesigned with the help of @BrandonCox.
I’ll be honest: The website for the Hook Conference didn’t really do it for me – the images were creative and the layout/colors were “typical”.
But the greatest parts were the copy. You have to read some of the speaker’s bio pages. I got so excited just reading about the speakers and what they might bring to the table! Made me instantly want to attend.
Stack Overflow, a juggernaut of QA boards for software professionals, has been around for quite some time. What’s fascinating is that it’s now being compared with Quora, the more-recent QA-type site that’s been getting a lot of criticism for not being very helpful:
Over 80 percent of questions get a good answer, Mr. Spolsky wrote, and many of the new Stack Exchange sites have 100 percent answer rates. One of the issues with Quora, a well-funded Bay Area startup founded by former Facebook employees, is the high number of unanswered questions.
Quora’s so bad that people have even created spoof websites:
With the current state of the economy, a lot of churches are looking for ways to lower costs. Many churches are turning to online communication tools to promote their events.
Online Church Bulletin was created for this very reason.
Typically, bulletins are printed and passed out to everyone who walks through the door. At the end of the service most of the bulletins are laying on the floor or seats. That’s a lot of money tossed aside every week!