Google Wave is no more

I’ve read in several places that Google is stopping development on Google wave. See for example this article on the BBC website: Google drops Wave because of lack of users.

That’s a pity. I had only just started exploring this exciting new platform. I had thought it could be used by the French UFM team in order to collaborate on various ministry ideas and projects. The different teams are quite distant and it could have been a good tool.

But we still have our monthly Skype meetings to keep up to date with each other.

New medias and the Christian mind.

Here is a list of a few articles I have come accross which lead me to wonder about the impact of the new medias (Internet, Facebook and the like, Mobile phones…) on the ministry, Evangelism, Discipleship, and on my/our own Spiritual growth. Comments on these are welcome:

After the Revolution by Albert Mohler | Reformed Theology Articles at Ligonier.org

The following article appeared in the June issue of Tabletalk magazine: After the Revolution by Albert Mohler.

Extract:

Like the Reformers who seized the opportunity afforded by the Gutenberg Revolution, we must see the world of new media as an arena for Christian truth-telling. Our engagement with new media is driven by impulses that are evangelistic, missiological, and grounded in apologetics.

And here is his conclusion:

Like every information revolution, the rise of new media requires Christian discernment. At the same time, there is no way we can ignore this challenge and deny the revolution. We can hardly expect to explain the hope that is in us when we aren’t even part of the conversation.

After the Revolution by Albert Mohler, Tabletalk magazine, June 2010.

Tim Challies: Who is using Whom

Tim Challies from Challies.com has an interesting article in the June issue of Tabletalk on new technologies entitled: Who is using whom. He reflects on technologies in general, and the different attitudes people have to new technologies. There are two types: those who embrace everything new, and those who don’t. But he has some helpful insigths:

(…)

While a technology may not carry the weight of morality with it, we would not want to downplay its significance. When a significant new technology is introduced to the world, we do not have the old world plus the new technology; we have a whole new world. The world today is not just the old world plus new digital technologies; it is a completely different world. What is true here generally is true of the church — even the local church. Local churches have been permanently changed by digital technologies; there is no going back. The question we face, then, as Christians and as defenders of the local church is how we will respond and adapt to these new realities.

(…)

He reflects on the phrase of a man called Marshall McLuhan who said: “the medium is the message”

(…)

A church may transition from using hymn books to using a PowerPoint projector. It seems quite a small matter, and thousands of churches have already done so. What difference does it make if the words are printed on paper in our hands or if the words are flashed onto a screen high above? But if the medium is the message, if the medium is more than a simple conduit for the message but actually intercepts and even overshadows the message, what do we stand to gain or lose? What risks are there in putting aside our hymn books and what opportunities are there in embracing this new technology? Maybe we will find that we risk unfamiliarity with the songs as families no longer have copies of the book at home to sing during times of family worship. Maybe we find that we are quick to add new songs to the repertoire at the expense of the classic hymns of days gone by. Where there is the opportunity to experience greater convenience, there remains great risk.

(…)

And here is his conclusion:

We are left with difficult realities. The world is changing, and it is senseless for us to wish that the old world could return. It will not; it is gone forever. What remains for us is to carefully examine new technologies, seeking to understand both the risks and opportunities they bring. What remains for us is to be diligent, to be discerning, to be wise, to examine how we will use the new technologies we encounter, and how they may just use us.

Tim Challies: Who is using Whom, Tabletalk, June 2010

Lucid Lynx

Those who know me a bit will know that I have been a fan of Linux for a number of year. Linux is an open-source Operating System, which means that it is available for free, but also that you can do pretty much what you want with it (even giving it away to friends) without breaking the law.

I have used a number of distributions over the years, starting with Opensuse. Through the years I have tried Fedora, Kubuntu, Ubuntu, and more recently Linux Mint. One of the problem with Linux distributions is that many tend to become addicted to upgrading their system in order to get the new exciting stuff. I must say I fall in that category, although I am now becoming more settled. So, after using Linux Mint for a while, about a year, I decided to upgrade to Ubuntu Linux Lucid Lynx, after reading many praises.

It went smoothly, and I am gradually getting back on track. I have most things reinstalled now, and almost everything seems to work smoothly. That’s appart from the wireless which got me frustrated. I checked the forums, and I am not the only one, so I feel better.

Even the sound is working at last, after a year when it was only working on and off.