What do you do when your church grows to the point where asking for member feedback is a daunting task? Maybe you want to get the input of the parents on the new children’s ministry programming. Or maybe you want to create an online version of a welcome card for your online campus. This blog post will be more for an IT tech then a production tech, but it will benefit your whole church. Continue Reading…
Would the Best GTD App Please Stand Up
For those of you that hate three letter acronyms, GTD stands for Getting Things Done. The latest buzz term for the age old task and time management programs. Continue Reading…
Spotlight – Pro Tools 8
It’s still been a crazy week, but I had some time last night to sit down with Derek Sexmith (@DerekSoundGuy) one of our sound guys and talk about the New Pro Tools 8 he used for a recent audio recording project.
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When is volunteer training a bad idea?
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Cleaning House… err Blog?
So I have come to the realisation that I am awesome at starting blogs. But frankly I suck at keeping them going. Like any habit you try and make or break, once you’ve let it slide once, it’s a rapid slippery slope from there.
I wonder sometimes if the problem I have is lack of structure in my day? I don’t have a set time that I do my blog reading or posting and as such, the habit forming processes is broken from the start.
Recently I moved a bunch of my sites from one hosting provider to another and that’s when I stumbled across the fact that not only had I neglected this blog, but that the comments were full of spam and garbage. I have Captcha installed, but this was human posted spam. The kind that is easy to clean up and manage when you log into your blog more then twice a year. So i just spent the better part of an hour uninstalling captcha and installing Mollom and then purging all the spam comments.
Now don’t get me wrong, there was nothing wrong with Captcha. It was doing exactly the job it was supposed to do. But recently on another web project, Rob Feature over at Mustardseed Media turned me onto Molom. It’s a project by two guys, one being the founder of Drupal and since I now build exclusively in Drupal, it was safe to assume that Mollom’s functionality with Drupal is going to be rock solid.
So I’ve cleaned up the blog and will be posting a “Did you blog today?” note on the side of my monitor. Hopefully I will be able to bring you more tips like Mollom and such so stay tuned.
If your a blogger, what do you do to stay in the habit of being consistent with your blogging?
Free or Open Source Solutions in the Church
When trying to solve IT problems in the church, money is invariably a concern that must be over come. Not that this doesn’t plague other organizations, but in a church their is always the concern of good stewardship of the church’s money. So when is a good time to spend money on a commercial product instead of a Free or Open Source Solution (FOSS)? A lot of that depends on how you answer the following questions.
1. Who is going to use it? The level of direct contact that the office staffhave with the solution is a large contributing factor in any FOSS implementation. Putting an open source spam filter on the server has such a low impact on the day to day users that this should be an easy answer. Projects like ASSP are a great way to clean up the user’s inbox with little to no user interaction with the program. This was my first experience with deploying FOSS in a office environment and the results were well appreciated by the users. Even those that did not participate in the retraining process. The closer you get to the user’s desktop though, the more you have to look at what your users are doing and how adaptable are they to something different. At Lakeside we are exploring the possibilities of users having Ubuntu desktops and others having Open Office instead of Microsoft Office. You will want to take your time and do your homework before you rush these solutions out. Our big issue with Open Office is our dependency on PowerPoint and the massive library of songs that we have created. We need to be sure that we don’t rush into the migration and have to recreate everything.
2. Is it compatible with the rest of the world? Or, no man is an island. You don’t want to have the best FOSS setup in the world and not be able to share files with people in your congregation or any outside services you may use. Imagine your graphics guru making up that sweet Easter invitation and your print shop only accepting Photoshop files. You will need to talk with your users and get a good understanding of what they do and who they share their files with.
3. Who is going to support it? Many churches don’t have a staff IT guy, it’s just a fact of ministry. You may contract an outside service or have a volunteer IT team. This will be your most deciding factor when it comes to deploying FOSS. Deploying Ubuntu on all your desktops may be a great idea. You have done all your homework, researched your users file sharing and work styles. But when something doesn’t work the way it was supposed to, who are they going to turn to? Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that FOSS are buggy or inferior, it’s just a simple fact that they are different. GIMP is an amazing alternative to Photoshop, but if your users are shortcut junkies, they will be lost. In short, plan out your FOSS deployment and it’s support plan.
There are probably a few more things that should be concidered, but these are what I consider to be the essentials. A FOSS implementation can help your church manage its IT budget, but don’t get stuck with expensive support costs.