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iPhone 3G  E-mail

Over the years I have typically replaced my mobile at the end of each contract, typically 24mths. The first was a Motorola carphone which used the analogue system. Next was an Ericson "T628" or something very - small at the time, then the first of several Nokia's a 3210 which was probably the most reliable of any, especially considering the harsh treatment of living on my belt while I mowed hundreds of lawns in the end the dust finally made the ringer to soft to hear BUT the phone still worked fine.Ericsson_R380 Later I the very cool Ericcson R380, there are still some features of that phone that I miss - it had the most comprehensive call history of any phone. This was the only new phone that I bought outright. However after about 18mths it would randomly descide whether it wanted to take calls or not. Despite this I was not keen to part with "her" Erica! - Aliki had for a time called her the "other woman" because I went on about how great it was. :-) She lived in my desk draw for some time until my mate Daniel need a part for his R380, we bought them together but his outlasted mine by years, perhaps he is a little more gentle or forgiving?

Back to the Nokia, and synchronisation became paramount, having spent far to long re-entering my contacts I determined never to have that happen again.The 6670 is still alive but the battery doesn't last long, it was replace by my first Win Mobile, an Imate ImateJasJamJasJam (HTC Hermes 100) which I upgraded from WM5 to WM6. As it neared the 2 year mark, it began "white screening" and is currently being repaired a second time for the same fault...

WM6 is classic MS - lots of menus and options, a bit slow and clunky. Very soon after it arrived I replaced the "Today" screen with "Pocket Breeze" from SBSH and the contact manager with their "Contact Breeze". The standard options became very old real quick. I added eSword Bible software and purchase a copy of the NLT. This combination proved to be very versatile I was even able to use the Remote Desktop to manage the office server and that of one of my clients. The NextG network gave coverage far and wide, and I utilised the internet sharing capability on our first WA trip.

Onward with  JasJam off for the second visit to the repair agent, and the highly likely possibility of the same failure in the future it was time to consider my options for a replacement. As I my contact with Telstra still had some time to run I first looked at Telstra phones as I could upgrade and still meet conctract obligations. After hashing around possibilities with sales staff I decided that I would jump in neck deep and get one of the new HTC Touch HDs. htc-hdWith WM6.1 and an 800x480 screen these are a very serious type phone, I reasoned that it would make Remote Access a breeze, but a $65 per month in handset payment for a cap plan all this ability came at a steep price. The sales girl soon informed me that they stock was a couple of days away. Grr I needed a phone today! Next option the Palm Treo, it also had WM6.1 and a QWERTY keyboard but regular 320 x 320 screen, however it did have Palm warranty which until that moment I had not paid any attention to, 2 years with full replacement if faulty (HTC was only 12 mths) - yes that would work well, and the handset payment was only $38 per month. Alas it too had just run out and stock was due in the next day.

Well that was enough to propel me through the door in search of other options. Next stop was my old network Optus. I had already determined while at Telstra that breaking my contract would cost about $430 so that any other option needed to take that into account. First up I considered the Samsung Omnia which had been given a reasonable writeup the main gripe being the occasional need for a stylus which didn't have a home but came on a cord tether! Yuk.. but hey I new from the JasJam that the fingernail usually did the trick for those fiddly moments. iphone3gAmazingly the handset payments were only $6 per month on a 12mth contract and $3 over 24 months!! Even including the $430 contract payout this was still less expensive than the Telstra phones. At that moment I noticed that the salesman was using an iPhone 3G and asked him how he found it. Very soon I was swayed to try something new and about one hour later walked out with my very first Apple computer and iPhone 3G - $

As is my usual approach to new gadgets I was interested in how I easy I would find the phone to use, without resorting to reading a manual! Well such is Apple's confidence that they do not even include a manual in the box!! I believe that this is the very first piece of hardware that I have ever purchased with out a manual (hard or soft). Well for the most part it is just that simple, stab a big finger at a little picture on the screen and just follow your instinct, once I figured out how to get back to the HOME screen - yes it is easy when you think about it just push the only button on the front of the phone.

It is not all quite so simple however and it took a Google search to figure out why the GPS was not working (you need to disable 3G network access, and enable LOCATION Services, before re-enabling 3G network then miraculously everything works just fine. Goodness knows why Apple is so short sited to not have a full blown navigation app available. Google Maps is pretty good, but as soon as you drop out of tower range you are cactus!

I think one of the killer features would have to be the "App Store", every phone should have one - hey for that matter every computer should have one. Yes I know that Ubuntu's package manager is pretty good, but this is way cool. Log into tour iTunes account, select the app you want free or paid select "Install" and as soon as downloading has completed there is a new icon on the screen and you are good to go! Updates are flagged with a little red flag and on click and your various apps are updated. This is truly remarkable.

I love the simplicity of clicking on a contact and choosing which number to call on, one more click and the call is underway.

While it is not perfect - no tethered modem, no MMS, no TbyT Navigation, it is major step forward in mobile telephony.

 
Video Editing Software  E-mail

Regularly I read magazine articles reviewing video editing software. Mostly they find that Adobe's Premier Pro is king of the heap. Each time I see this conclusion I scratch my thinning head and wonder how they arrive at such a conclusion.

Recently I have given access to a full version of the Adobe Master Collection, which is way cool, especially as it includes the awesome Photoshop and AfterEffects packages. Of course Premier Pro is also there so it was time to give it my own going over.

At the outset I must confess to having downloaded trial versions of most of the leading NLE programs several years ago. My main criteria at that time was that even though I had only ever used an old version of "Video Studio", I should be able to get something useful happening within 10-15 minutes without needing to resort to help manuals. Although "Pinnacle Studio" looked promising, it was Vegas Studio 4 that hooked me. Coming from a MS Windows backgroud it just made sense almost immediately with drag and drop placement, pusing two clips together created an automatic crossfade of video and audio, and then moving the cursor over a clip I noticed that it changed and with a few clicks I had fades and leve changes. Right click openned a context menu that gave fairly straight forward options. I was sold. 

 Roll forward to 2009 and I have now been using Sony Vegas Pro 8.0 (as it is now known) for close to 5 years. It is a productive tool the features and abilities of which I am still only scratching the surface. It now runs on an Intel platform with a quad core processor and is a valued part of our fultime ministry.

So now that I have Adobe Premier Pro CS4 installed I as keen to put the defacto industry standard (at least in the PC world) through its paces.

 
Missed by that much...  E-mail

On Saturday afternoon (7th Feb) I recieved an SMS that the MMM offices had been destroyed www.mmm.org.au - if I had followed my original plan I would have been right there. Amazingly there were no fatalities at the site in the hills behind Whittlesea (Humevale). Sadly some of the staff have lost homes and family. They remain in our thougts and prayers.

It had been my intention to stay at the MMM head office for the weekend of Feb 7/8. However I suddenly felt compelled to go home to Queensland to spend time with the family and on Tuesday 3rd I drove to Newcastle, left the truck with friends and caught a plane to the Gold Coast on Wednesday afternoon.

 
Reduce your Phone Bill  E-mail

While most of us grumble about the size of our phone bills, and I have had many conversations with folk who continue to use dialup internet access because they can't justify broadband. However I am convinced that many need to look at the larger picture and consider a combining a move to broadband with using "Internet Telephony" or VoIP (voice over internet protocol) as there are substantial savings to be had.

The impact of VoIP is starting to be seen by the number o offers from the big telcos offering bundle deals which include a number of phone calls (local and national) together with ADSL internet. Some even give you the choice to ditch your telephone line altogther! While the thought of not having a fixed line telephone may be daunting, there is a middle solution which may cost a little more (typically $20 per month) but allows the best of both worlds.

As an example of the nature of the savings, consider a regular monthy phone bill of between $90 and $120 made up of mostly local and national calls. On possible alternative that I have helped a few people put in place is to down grade the home phone to the most basic plan typically $20/mth combined with a $40 ADSL plan with at least 5Gig of download (capped with a minimum speed of 512kbs), and a VoIP plan of $15-20/mth (which usually includes at least 150 local and national calls but could as many as 300 to unlimited). This gives a total communication bill for the month of just $80! And no rude surprises.

For our office I have a basic phone plan $20 per month, a substantial internet connection - $55/mth ADSL 1.5Mbs (10Gig capped) from Internode and a minimum $20 Nodephone account (VoIP from Internode) which includes a telephone number and $15 value in calls. While Nodephone calls are charged at 18c per call I rarely see the phone component of my bill even approach $30. For me the cost of is typically $95 - $105 per month. And I make calls right across Australia every day! I am free to talk as long as is required knowing that my call only costs 18 cents untimed!

While I could save even more on the call costs I have found that to make business calls, Nodephone is worth every cent as the call quality is always superb and in 2 years of using this system I can only recall a handful of times where I was cut off. If you are mostly using your phone for personal calls then variable call quality or drop outs may be worth living with for the tiny cost of making another call. The big players in the space are Engin, GoTalk and MyNetfone.

There is one crucial component that is best purchased outright to make all of the above work smoothly and that is an ADSL Modem/Router with integrated VoIP and perhaps wireless - Billion have been my favourite for the past 3 years.

The other options from the links of Optus, Virgin and Vodaphone might the topical of another post. As might the option to go naked with your DSL!

 
Dynamic Church Websites  E-mail

Every week I visit many church websites. They are my first point of contact as I seek to discover churches that may be open having ALIKI partner with them in ministry. While a website gives a very small incomplete picture of church life, it can also be a treasure trove of helpfulness. Many times I have been sidetracked to read the pastor's blog because if was easy to find and the heading really leapt out at me. Indeed on several occasion I have headed straight over to Koorong or Amazon to order a book, CD or DVD because of something that I have just read.

On the flip side there have been far more times where I have gone to look at the events calendar to find that the last entry was 8mths or more old, or that the latest news entry mentioned the wonderful time that all had at the previous church camp two years ago.

We all know how this happens! Some bright enterprising individual has started the ball rolling and everything went swimingly well until some time later when the time commitments crowded in or circumstances moved them on. Now no one knows how to update the system because all the software belongs to someone else, and no one understands HTML anyway.

The solution for many churches is to consider getting a Content Managment System, my favourite as any one knows is Joomla!  while there are heaps of alternatives I keep returning to this one as it is robust has a huge support base and the price is right - FREE. All of the major systems allow ordinary folk to setup and maintain a website without fancy software. Usually all that is required once the package is installed on your web server, all that is typically required is a web browser (of course my preferance is FireFox although Google's Chrome is also looking promisng) and something to edit pictures even Google's Picassa 3 should be sufficient for the basics (you may need to get some more expert assistance tinkering with the template images to make the site look and feel as you wish) but from that point on some basic tools will keep everthing running smoothly.

The primary reason that I started playing with Conten Management Systems CMS was to reduce my workload as I tried to keep ALIKI's calendar updated. With 2 or more concerts every week and more being added all the time I need to remove the concerts listings that were out of date and move them to 'Previous'. The web powered calendar component of the Joomla system was bliss, as soon as a concert had happened it automatically moved to the archive list and the next event popped up into top spot. Now all I have to do is keep adding new events and the system looks after itself.

So with a little bit of time invested you to can have a system that will work on relatively modest budget!

 
Choosing A Data Projector  E-mail
Before making a purchasing decision, it is critical that you know just how the projector is to be used, and just importantly how it might be used in the next year or so. Sadly it seems that the over-riding consideration is price.While price must always be taken into account there are more important questions that need to be asked before the cost. Throughout this discussion I am primarily thinking of projectors used in the context of the church setting.

   1. What is the primary media to be projected?
   2. How large will the image need to be?
   3. What type of screen will be used?
   4. How much light will be in the room/on the screen?
   5. Can the room lighting be controlled?
   6. Where will the unit positioned?
   7. How will you control it?
   8. How many connection types do you need to allow for?
   9. What type of projector will work best?
Read more...
 
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