This is what Irving Bible Church calls its “Digital Community“. It’s mainly forums, including prayer requests. A busy design, but hip.
Month: July 2005
Skype toolbar for Outlook
This new toolbar from Skype integrates with the Outlook address book and provides presence information. I haven’t tried it yet.
Consumer VoIP
Mike Wendland has dropped his regular phone line at home in favor of SunRocket VoIP service. $199/year for unlimited local and long distance calling. It’s no longer an experimental thing; it’s real.
Technorati is on a roll
Richard MacManus of Read/Write Web gives some stats showing that Technorati has become the top blog search site.
Facebook makes it to the popular press
Here’s an article on Facebook posted this evening on MSNBC.
Yahoo MyWeb 2.0
People are comparing this new Yahoo service (now in beta) to del.icio.us. I haven’t had time to play around with either one.
Keeping up with what’s happening “out there”
In this post, Dave Winer explains how companies can and should use blogging to find out what their customers are thinking. It’s not fun to be publicly criticized, but it’s dumb to miss out on the conversation because failure to take legitimate customer criticism into account will open an opportunity for competitors.
I believe this thinking applies to the church as well. It resonates strongly with Adam Hamilton’s ideas in his book Leading Beyond the Walls. As church leaders, we have to work very hard to keep up with what is happening outside the four walls of the church. Yet that’s where the unchurched people are that we’re trying to reach.
Comparing Google and Yahoo rankings
A German blogger has posted a cool tool that compares Google and Yahoo rankings. I tried it on “church Kansas City“.
A church website built completely as a blog
Emmanuel Episcopal Church built their website within Typepad, a popular blogging platform. The website doesn’t have a blog, or refer to staff blogs, it IS a blog.