Real Life Twitter – Hilarious Video
// May 3rd, 2009 // 3 Comments » // Humor, Video
I found this (ironically via @nathanrice on Twitter) and laughed out loud. Â Enjoy, and if you’re a Twitter user like me don’t take yourself too seriously… Â ;-)
I'm a husband, father, pastor, and web designer. Above all, I'm a Christ follower. I write about family, pastoring, the Church, Jesus, humor, and whatever else distracts me. Stick around. I might distract you too.
// May 3rd, 2009 // 3 Comments » // Humor, Video
I found this (ironically via @nathanrice on Twitter) and laughed out loud. Â Enjoy, and if you’re a Twitter user like me don’t take yourself too seriously… Â ;-)
// April 29th, 2009 // No Comments » // Church Life
This is the 4th installment of a series of posts I’m doing to help pastors get themselves and their churches online and plugged in.
“Are you crazy? I don’t have time for a blog, Facebook, and Twitter!” ~ You
Yes you do. I’ll show you how to leverage Twitter and your Wordpress blog to get your feet wet in the social networking world with minimal effort. Read on.
I mentioned in my first post of the series that we are now living in a global culture. Everyone is asking the question “Where do I fit in this new global world?”. The internet, to a large degree, has been the arena in which people have sought to answer that question. We’ve seen a shift in the past 10 years or so. Around the new millennium, people were just trying to make money with the internet. Since then, the big innovations have been centered around people connecting with other people. This is social networking. People finding new ways to connect to each other on the global stage of the internet (at least, that’s how I define it…)
There are a dizzying array of social networking options out there. Feel free to explore them, but I’m going to focus on the two big ones: Facebook and Twitter. (forget MySpace – it’s been thoroughly trounced by Facebook at this point). Let’s take them one at a time.
So be careful not to underestimate it. Twitter began as a simple question, “What are you doing?” Not very impressive. What’s impressive is how the “hive mind” of the web took the simple idea and used it to redefine social networking.
This video might help with the background:
I was very skeptical of Twitter at first. It all seemed very narcissistic to me. But I finally got convinced to try it and I’ve never looked back. I’m meeting people that I never would have met any other way, and it’s one of the few social networking tools that I have tried that actually improved my life.  If you need more convincing, here’s 12 more reasons to start today. For the rest of you that are ready to dive in, here’s what you need to do:
If you need more help with Twitter, try this collection of resources.
I have to confess. I don’t really like Facebook and I don’t go to it very often. But, no one really knows it. If you go to my Facebook profile it will look like I’m there all the time. It’s not so.
Where Twitter is like a focussed, short, and somewhat controlled connection tool… Facebook is like trying to drink from a fire hose. It’s overwhelming to me at times. I’m certainly a minority there… Facebook is HUGE and most of the people in my church are active there. Here’s how I maintain visibility on Facebook without letting it rule my time:
As you can see, Twitter really is at the center of my social network. I suggest you set yourself up the same way.
// April 14th, 2009 // 5 Comments » // Pet Peeves, Twitter
Twitter is taking the web by storm and I’m glad. Not only is it the “next cool thing”, but it is having a real effect on internet culture, how we use the web, and it is beginning (in my view) to change our “offline” culture as well. But that’s another post, another day. Right now, I’d like to point out one thing that irritates me about some Twitter users.
It’s the same complaint that I had when blogging first hit the world like an atom bomb of inane “look at what my cat just did” carnage. Sure, everyone has a voice now, but should everyone really have a voice? I guess so. Honestly, it’s hard not to want to restrict that freedom when your buddy expects you to look at daily updates on the state of his back hair. Or your Aunt wants you to look at 23 pictures of her in the Snuggie she got for Christmas on Facebook. Sometimes it’s best to keep our narcissism to ourselves until we eventually discover that the world simply can’t revolve around more than one person at a time. Now, years later, it seems like some of the “Cat Blogging” has abated and the blogosphere has reached a little more equilibrium (well… mostly). Maybe we just had to get it out of our system for a while.
Now Twitter enters the scene and the immediacy of communication and life-share gets us all hot and bothered again. The problem is that life-share can quickly become over-share.