Posts Tagged ‘Review’

29 Twitter Tools

Saturday, January 17th, 2009


I’ve been enjoying Twitter for a while, and as the product has matured and stabilized it has gathered quite a few support tools. Some I’ve used, others I’ve just bookmarked. So, for your delectation, here’s the list.

I’m also playing with the idea of thumbnail previews of sites. These are coming from a repository at iwebtools; there’s a question in my mind as to how fast the thumbnails are built – of the 29 links in this post, only 4 were already built when I wrote it. (They claim the thumbnails are built within a few minutes, but I’ve been waiting for about two hours now.) Let me know in the comments if the preview (when it’s filled in) is handy or just an irritant to you. [Update: As of Feb 7 iWebtools still hadn't updated the thumbnails, so I've dropped the link.]

Clients

Twitter

Post up to 140 characters– like a teeny tiny blog, or your Facebook status line. It goes to people who follow you (your ‘tweets’); you can follow others, join groups.

Twhirl

“twhirl is a social software desktop client, based on the Adobe AIR platform. Some of twhirl’s features:

  • runs on both Windows (2000/XP/Vista) and Mac OSX
  • connects to multiple Twitter, laconi.ca, Friendfeed and seesmic accounts
  • notifications on new messages
  • shorten long URLs (using snurl, twurl or is.gd)
  • cross-post twitter updates to Pownce and Jaiku
  • post images to TwitPic
  • search tweets using Twitter Search and TweetScan
  • timeline filtering
  • color schemes
  • automatically check for new versions”

OutTwit (note: Not Outwit)

“If you are a Microsoft® Outlook® user, you probably have it open all the time. Now you can update your Twitter status and follow your friends without having to open any other applications. OutTwit seamlessly integrates Twitter into Outlook.

Some of OutTwit’s features:

  • Update your Twitter status directly from Outlook.
  • Receive your friend updates as Outlook messages.
  • Archive, manage, group and search your tweets the same way you manage your email.
  • Search, track keywords. OutTwit will automatically download ALL tweets matching the keywords you specify, even if you are not following the tweet sender. This feature is perfect for keeping up to date with the Twitter buzz on your name, brand, interests, etc.
  • Group tweets by sender, topic, etc using the Search feature
  • See new tweets at a glance.
  • Assign custom folder and categories to new messages.
  • Use Outlook’s “Reply” and “ReplyAll” commands to send twitter direct messages and @replies.
  • Automatically sort new tweets into per-sender folders.
  • Shorten URLs with tinyurl.
  • See graphs of your Twitter usage statistics.
  • Tweets sent to you ( and direct) are marked with high importance, so you can see them at a glance.”

Things I wish they’d implement/fix:

  • If you type a message into the text area and then click somewhere else (to copy a link, for instance), the message vanishes. They say it’s because they’ve implemented the product using that function in Outlook, but I don’t find that a terribly satisfactory reason. Xobni and Lookout both run inside Outlook, and neither of them have this problem.
  • I’d like to not receive messages that reply to someone I’m not following.  Of the last 100 Tweets I received from other people, 40% were replies I had no interest in.
  • I’d like to have them pre-fetch pictures from services like twitpic/flickr and put them in the message, so I didn’t have to click through to my browser. 10% of my inbound Twitters contain picture URLs.

Thing is, this is my main Twitter pipe now. Other than the first 2 bullets above, I think it’s a tremendous product. I just want perfection (as I define it!).

HelloTxt

This client supports a huge number of services. Put your message in here and it will be sent simultaneously to any of the following that you’ve set up:

Bebo, BeeMood, blinko, Blip.fm, Blip.pl, Brightkite, Buboo, Custom Url, Facebook, Fanfou, Fazkut, Feecle, Flickr, Frazr, Friendfeed, Gozub, Hi5, Hictu, Identica, Jaiku, Jisko, Koornk, Kwippy, Linkedin, Meemi, Mexicodiario, MySpace, Numpa, Plaxo, Plerb, Plurk, Rejaw, Socialmedian, Tumblr, Twitter, Utterli, Yammer, you are.

You can define two groups (basically friends and business), and send messages to one or the other (or both) groups.

TweetDeck

TweetDeck is like an extended version of Twhirl. Based on Adobe Air, it allows you to group feed into multiple columns by topic or group for easier focus. I found the interface a bit confusing – created columns I couldn’t get rid of easily/intuitively. Not bad, but needs some work. It is still in beta.

Sending

TwitSnip

Share text from other sites over Twitter. “TwitSnip is a simple tool for easily posting to Twitter. It lets you “quote” text on any web page. It does nifty things like looking up the for the website and linking back to the source. It shortens the URL too. It even tries to shorten the length of the tweet (when needed) using a twitabulary of short words.”

TwitPic

Share photos over Twitter. People can comment on the site, which goes back to you via your twitter feed.

TwitTube

Share videos over Twitter.

TweetShrink

OK, you want to type a bit more than 140 characters. How to squeeze it in? Use this service. Type in your message and it will compress it using SMS-style abbreviations.

That line became 13 characters shorter:

OK, U wnt 2 type a bit more than 140 characters. How 2 squeeze it in? Use this service. Type in yr msg, & it will compress it using SMS-style abbreviations.

Searching

Twitter search

Find a search term in the Twitter stream

Twitturls

“People post links in their twitter feed. We grab ‘em, visit ‘em, count ‘em, score ‘em and list ‘em. Today’s most tweeted links. This list is refactored every minute. A “what’s buzzing” on twitter.”

This site also displays the latest pictures and YouTube videos.

Twitt(URL)y

Tracks URLs in peoples’ Twitters, then finds who else is pointing to that URL to rate the popularity.

TwitPwr

Not sure I get the point of this. If you have a link to send to your tweets, put it in here. But if you don’t have links to send, you’d use another interface which will support the link anyway. Further, people visiting the link find it in a frame (blechh!) and your view is tracked. 2 Thumbs down.

TweeTree

“Tweetree puts your Twitter stream in a tree so you can see the posts people are replying to in context. It also pulls in lots of external content like twitpic photos, youtube videos and more, so that you can see them right in your stream without having to click through every link your friends post.”

Supported content: Youtube, Flickr, TwitPic, FriendFeed, Seesmic, Qik, Lala, Blip.fm, xkcd

PeopleBrowser

A powerful viewer into the Twitscape. Build your own group or monitor someone else’s. Watch the entire Twitterverse go by. See the latest trends in the conversations. Track news sites. Search by keyword. Send Twitters.

Other

Twitter status

Color codes the status of the Twitter system, and gives explanations

TweetScan

Download your Tweet history.

TwitterCounter

For those who think followers are important in quantity. This gives you a little badge to put on your website, and graphs your (or another twitterer’s) growth over time.

TwitTangle

As the number of people you follow goes up, you may not want to follow them all as soon as the tweets come in. Very painful to get started, and I don’t see the value. 1 Thumb down.

TwitterVenn – by Jeff Clark

Put in 2 or 3 search terms and build a Venn diagram. It also provides a tag cloud and a running feed at the bottom, either of which can be clicked. It’s a bit difficult to put the words in – uses a non-standard keyboard reader – but otherwise nice.

TwitterSpectrum – by Jeff Clark

Similar to TwitterVenn – ways to visualize relationships between words.

TweetWasters

How much time have people wasted reading someone’s twitters? This counts it. 2 ½ hours if you’ve been following me.

FriendOrFollow

Who are you following that isn’t following you back? Who’s following you that you aren’t following back? Here’s the quick way to find out.

MrTweet

Suggests other people to follow based on who you’re following. Clever idea if you want to connect to the influencers of the people you’re already following.

Xefer

Look at the times of day/week a person Twitters

Qwitter

Find out who’s leaving you. Qwitter checks your followers and notifies you as often as it can, depending on how many people are using it and how many followers they have.

TwitterGrader

Compare a Twitter user against the rest of the Twitterverse and get a ‘grade’. Also available is the ranking within the geographic area. My grade is 78, and I’m ranked 38th in my state (whoo).

FollowCost

How annoying would it be to follow a Twitterer? Basically, how many Tweets per day.

Twellow

Reads Twitters and automatically places the author into one or more categories based on Tweet content. So if you want to find people interested in a category, say pilots or pastors, antiques or pets, go to the front page and click through. It also allows you to search for people geographically, when you click on the ‘TwellowHood’ tab.

[Update, 19 Jan 09: That last paragraph got cut off somewhere along the way, sorry. And here's #30:

TweetGrid

Allows you to track up to 9 Twitter search terms, each in its own frame. Nice if you're looking for a number of words or phrases at the same time. ]

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Reviews – 2008 Reading, part 1

Friday, January 2nd, 2009


Finished these books last year (the links include my Amazon Associate number, so if you want to buy the book click through the link. You don’t pay any more, and I get a teeny tiny bit ): Church Marketing 101: Preparing Your Church for Greater Growth by Richard Reising

Readability: 7 Insight: 8 Practicality: 8

A great book about using excellence and common sense in helping people to find value in your church. ‘Marketing’ doesn’t have to be all about our perceptions of sleaze-ball Madison Avenue hard-sell. This is about connecting and communicating. A great book – lots to learn in here.

“The battle for growth is first fought in the hearts of churchgoers who want to better the lives of those around them”


Crazy Love: Overwhelmed by a Relentless God by Francis Chan

Readability: 8 Insight: 5 Practicality: 7

Much of what Chan is writing here is obvious. I don’t mean that slightingly. Sometimes we need to have the obvious thrust upon us because we’ve ignored it for too long. Sometimes it’s time to recognize that, just because a whole bunch of people say something, it doesn’t make them right.

“To put it bluntly, when you get your own universe, you can make your own standards. When we disagree, let’s not assume it’s His reasoning that needs correction.”

His chapter on lukewarm people is particularly damning, but the encouragement throughout the rest of the book is powerful – what does “God is Love” really mean? What do people who are obsessed with God do and think? If you’re really in love with God, life gets different.


C.S. Lewis In A Time Of War by Justin Phillips

Readability: 8 Insight: x Practicality: x

This was a gift from good friends last Christmas – an excellent account of the way Lewis’ radio broadcasts became Mere Christianity. More on the book in my review here

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The Elephant in the Boardroom: Speaking the Unspoken about Pastoral Transitions (J-B Leadership Network Series) by Carolyn Weese & J. Russell Crabtree

Readability: 6 Insight: 6 Practicality: 7

I bought this because I sensed that the minister of the church I was attending was planning on leaving – as indeed he did, 6 months later. It gave me some good insight for what was about to happen, and in general, I thought that – for the narrow scope of life it was tackling – it did a pretty good job. I wasn’t overly impressed with the organization of the material, and I seriously question using the CMM approach for a church! However, other than small specific points of disagreement there are some excellent points being made from both common sense and experience. One significant shortfall however: There are a number of innocuous reasons for a minister to leave – such as retirement, ill-health or term limit – but there are also far more painful reasons, such as crises brought about by divisiveness between ministers or between clergy and laity. I felt that one quick chapter on low-performing churches was inadequate to cover this painful area. But there aren’t many books on this topic, and as a starter it did cover some much-needed ground.


The Emerging Church: Vintage Christianity for New Generations by Dan Kimball

Readability: 7 Insight: 7 Practicality: 8

All about the post-modern church – although Kimball defines the ‘modern’ church as being ‘seeker-sensitive’ and the ‘post-modern’ church as being ‘post-seeker-sensitive’. My impression is that seeker-sensitive services were on the cusp between modern and post-modern – a brief movement that was tried by a number of forward-thinking congregations and found wanting. The book has the same friendly layout as Emerging Worship, and a great deal of helpful and relevant material based on Kimball’s experience in developing a post-modern church. Good stuff.

“…Scripture indicates it’s the parents’ responsibility to teach their children the things of God (Deut. 11:19). The church should supplement rather than replace the parents’ role.”


Emerging Worship: Creating Worship Gatherings for New Generations by Dan Kimball

Readability: 9 Insight: 9 Practicality: 8

This was the first book I read on post-millennial worship, and it was very much the eye-opener. I was excited about how many times throughout the Bible the call to worship is made (190 times), either by God, priest, prophet, king or apostle. My copy is full of highlighting and checkmarks (and a few scratch-outs as well). Definitely an exciting book.

“To be blunt, many modern … worship services are more anthropocentric than Christocentric. Jesus’ name is mentioned here and there, yet he [sic] is almost a side issue to the real focus…”

More on the book in my review here

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Essential Church?: Reclaiming a Generation of Dropouts by Thom S. Rainer and Sam S. Rainer III

Readability: 7 Insight: 5 Practicality: 5

I was able to download a free version of this book as a PDF, and while in general it’s an interesting book, it seems to be very confused about statistics. It pulls a great many of them, and displays them as authoritative, but I was often unclear as to how the statistic proved the point being made. It seemed as if the conclusion was arrived at by common sense, then the statistics were retro-fitted to confirm it- a very dangerous use of statistics. The book also suffered from some terribly ‘hokey’ interview descriptions:

“How do you feel it’s your fault?” She stared at the wall several moments. We could tell she was choosing her words carefully. (p. 71)

And

“I was raised in a Christian home,” he said softly. … John swallowed hard for a second and then gave us his story about becoming a church dropout. (p. 2)

Definitely not on a par with Rainer’s previous offering, Simple Church.


The Celtic Way of Evangelism: How Christianity Can Reach the West…Again by George C. Hunter III

Readability: 7 Insight: 7 Practicality: 7

The book states that the Roman way of evangelism was to offer a rigid protocol – this is how you must ‘do’ Christianity – and get people to adopt it, often by carrot and stick. The Celtic way of evangelism was for the missionaries to adapt their own lifestyles so that they could reach people from the local culture; then those people could understand (a more fluid) religion and faith. Hunter then goes on to posit that newer churches in America are successful when they break from the traditional European denominational views and speak to local people in local terms. The denominational (Roman) approach focuses on the institution; the Celtic approach focuses on the movement – a sort of ‘religion vs faith’ debate. Examples of this ‘Celtic’ approach today are the Alpha courses offered by so many churches, and the cell-driven church movement.


Simple Church: Returning to God’s Process for Making Disciples by Thom S. Rainer & Eric Geiger

Readability: 7 Insight: 8 Practicality: 8

An excellent book with excellent insight on simplifying church so that it can do what it’s supposed to do. I’ve written more extensively on the book here, so I’ll leave you to it. In contrast to Rainer’s later book, Essential Church, statistics are used much more clearly, and possibly because of that, more effectively.

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Review – Simple Church

Sunday, December 14th, 2008


Some books are easy to read – even non-fiction. There are a number of reasons that come to mind: One is that you agree with them completely and spend the entire time saying, “Yes!” to everything you’re reading. These books affirm your point of view on the matter. A second reason is that the book sets out perhaps just one thought – new to you – and spends the rest of the time showing you how you would have come to that conclusion yourself if only you’d been thinking down that path. Books like this are exciting, because it’s as if they’re introducing you to a part of your own mind that you haven’t met yet.

Simple Church, by Thom S. Rainer & Eric Geiger, is a book that appeals for the second reason. It’s a fast read even though it’s not a particularly small book; it’s engaging; it guides through several examples; it bases the conclusion on some solid evidence and its logic is well presented. But above all, the idea is infectious.

The one new thought is this: to follow the true mission of Christ (which presumably all Churches should want to do if they call themselves a ‘Christian’ church) is to be obedient to Matt 28:19 and Acts 1:8. What do successful churches do? They stay focused on their process; distill it down to the minimum to be effective; and protect it. The process that often seems to work best these days is a three-step tool –

  1. Step one is to invite people to attend, and provide an environment where they feel comfortable staying.
  2. If they stay and eventually accept Christ, then step two is to connect them with others in the church who are more mature and who can help them to grow.
  3. Finally, the third step is for these new members to take the lead: to bring their strengths to bear inside the church, and to invite others through the door.

A three-step process such as this, say the authors, is also easy to turn into a metaphor and remember – this helps members understand what the church’s drive (focus) is all about. This method has been developed and adopted by some of the fastest-growing churches in North America. North Point calls the three steps “Foyer to Living room to Kitchen”, and several churches (i.e., Cross Lane Community Church in Terre Haute, IN) have copied that metaphor. Saddleback uses a similar one. But it’s just a metaphor. The real key is to simplify church down to its basics and not get sidetracked by the latest, greatest idea. Programming is potentially distracting – instead, push what would have been ‘Yet Another Program’ into the existing process.

I don’t think the three-step process would have worked in mainstream churches 100 or even 50 years ago – the focus in churches was all about allowing people to come to church, not about going to the people. But today, some churches are reexamining the original mission (sort of ‘getting back to the basics’, if you will) and looking for ways to fulfill it more effectively. Again, I don’t get the sense that the authors are saying the three-step process is the only one that works.

What is being said here is, “Clarify your vision; focus on the mission; don’t let yourself get bogged down with programming that takes effort and energy away from the mission; get rid of the pet projects and deadwood that are strangling the effectiveness of your ministry. ”

And that’s good advice for any endeavor.

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Review – The Story of Everything

Thursday, December 11th, 2008


Wasn’t tired last night and the Biffster wanted to hang with me, so around 12:30 I picked up a new book called ‘The Story of Everything’ by John Kotre. It’s a small book (I was done in about 90 minutes); it’s billed as, “A parable of Creation and Evolution”. I’m throwing in a few spoilers here and there below, but I’m leaving the most significant revelation for you to discover for yourself. His two main characters are Adam – who we follow through the book as he grows from boy to mature adult – and an entity called ‘The Story’.

In one way it’s a sad little tale about a gifted boy who loses his grandfather (he dies), grows up to be a young man who loses his wife and son (she leaves him), then loses his dream – and at the end of his working life is still trying to find the point of it all – to make his mark on life and apply his gift. Or the story could be about the idea that, if you’re an otherwise ordinary person who has been given an incredibly huge gift, it might be a talent just too big for you to exercise.

But I don’t think either of those points are the central theme here – nor, for that matter, is the conflict between the creation and evolution parties in all its stupid, pointless anger, stubbornness, reactionary-ism and iconoclasty-ness.

First of all, Kotre is simply trying to point out that, contrary to popular thought, belief does not necessarily change as our understanding changes. Passionate flat-world thinking gave way to the round earth as we learnt more; an Earth-centric perspective eventually gave way to an understanding of planets in orbit. And in both cases, the church held the former view and fought the latter vigorously. Also in both cases, the change in understanding in no whit lessened humanity’s belief in God.

Secondly, even if belief did change our perception of God and His Purpose and Creation, it doesn’t change the reality of what God, His Purpose and His Creation are all about. In the same way, he says, it may be inevitable that creationist thinking will eventually give way to evolutionary thinking. And if so, then the church, like the rest of the world, will move past this issue and get on with life.

Although it’s clear that the entity called Story is sentient (it has a house and can purchase books and software), it’s difficult to reconcile just exactly what story we’re talking about. When we first meet it, we’re told very clearly that the Story is the Bible. It looks at a very old book it owns and remembers being printed onto the book’s pages. As time goes on, however, it remembers earlier versions of itself, back to papyrus and clay (so it clearly isn’t the Bible, which was never stored in cuneiform on clay), and eventually even to oral traditions. This leads us to the possibility that this could be the story of ‘Everything since the Beginning of Existence’, and the Story simply forgot about the earlier bits; just as for a long time people believed the Bible was the story of everything, so Story went along with them and believed that about itself too. Finally, near the end of the book, we come to find out that Story is really Adam’s – what – imagination? World understanding? The key to making sense of the talent he was given? Something along those lines.

Thirdly, Kotre is saying that this new perspective will change as well; that there will be other passionately-held beliefs that will be eroded and will eventually change the landscape. It’s clear from the central character’s words at the end that this is wisdom he is passing on.

I found the book to be easy to read, well-written from the story-telling perspective. It’s evident that the writer is as fed up with the Creation vs Evolution debate as I am, and he’s trying to put it into perspective with this tale. A parable over-simplifies the reality in order to reveal the core components to explain their true relationship. I think that this parable certainly glosses over much of the complexity to achieve that end. But unlike most parables, it also muddles things up a bit. If Story truly is the Bible then it’s difficult to see why it is saying it was wrong – the Bible, whatever humans believe, claims to be inerrant. Or was Story itself supposed to be evolving here? From the Bible to the story of all Creation? In which case it’s hardly a positive move to go from everybody’s story of Everything to just one person’s understanding of ‘How It All Fits Together’.

I’m also uncomfortable comparing the ‘flat Earth’ belief (which had already been disproven by Aristarchus and is not found in the Bible) to the account of creation (which clearly is in the Bible). I’m even less comfortable with the logic that, since conquering the flat-Earth and Earth-centric views didn’t result in sudden widespread disbelief, then conquering the creationist view won’t either. We’re in a different era from the flat-Earth, and peoples’ irritation over church issues are being inflamed by their personal beliefs over the issue – creation/evolution is not only a divisive issue, it has become a catalyst to division, in a way that the other ideas never did.

However: I thought the first ending (on the plane) was quite interesting – resequencing perception can often lead to deep insights. And the second ending (at home afterward) was good too. I do like a good redemption to a story! All in all, a pretty good read.

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On the new Xobni release – 1.6.3

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008


I’ve just installed the new version of Xobni – 1.6.3 – for Outlook. Xobni sits inside Outlook and acts as a helper, reading emails, indexing the content for searches and putting info about your contacts into a sidebar. I’ve used it quite a bit, although I have to say it puts a load on the system at Outlook startup time. Anyway, here are my thoughts on the new release:

  • The download required me to uninstall the old version before I could install the new one. Not the best of approaches, but I did that. Then it re-indexed my email – again, not the most convenient approach.
  • The new version links into Facebook to get certain pieces of information. I like the feature up to a point – problem is, a lot of my contacts have fairly common names, so I have to select the person I’m connecting to from a list – and there’s very little info about them, so often it’s just not possible to determine who this is. Not everyone on Facebook has a photo. When I do get a positive hit, though, it’s a winner.
  • The LinkedIn connection from the previous incarnation is still there, and that’s a winner too. This time they’ve added Hoovers, which will go over ‘big’ with business-oriented users, and Skype contact support, which will go over big with a mostly different audience.
  • There are some nice feature tweaks from the old version that I appreciate – the drop-down menu approach to the LinkedIn, Facebook & Hoover buttons; the new ‘Start over’ button (needed that!). I also like the more detailed aproach to the profile editing. The ability to pull info into the profile from verious sources available – photo from Outlook, LinkedIn, Facebook or Xobni; position & company info from Outlook, LinkedIn or Xobni – these are good additions. Behind the scenes there seem to have been a few adjustments – a little faster, I think, and the logic is definitely improved – it no longer confuses me with another Steve when it begins to build the indexes (it used to take about 30 minutes to figure out my correct name).
  • Ranking still seems to be wrong based on the numbers – someone with 365 emails total is being ranked higher than someone with 366, and one friend with 3 total is ranked at 10, while another with 110 is ranked at 12! I don’t get that, but it’s not keeping me up at night.

At this point, the only confusion I have is – how do I merge profiles? It used to be that by giving 2 email addresses the same name, the profiles were merged. Now this doesn’t seem to happen. I liked the old approach, because it meant that I had all their current (and past) emails in one place (and it also merged their ranks); now if I click on someone I may not get the email I want.

My wishlist – include Twitter addresses, and allow me to send/receive my Twitters through the Xobni addon. I’m already using OutTwit for this – it has a few flaws, but combining products would be sweet. You could write the Twitter in the area currently used as the drop-down menu (hint, hint).

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Twitter Botitecture

Sunday, August 10th, 2008


I got all excited about 3 months ago and decided to write a verse-of-the-day Twitter-bot. I had just bumped into Twitter a few days earlier (we don’t have a lot of this techy-stuff out here in New England), and I thought ‘just the thing’. Then the trouble started.

(more…)

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