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Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Time: How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Time magazine’s Steven Johnson recently wrote an interesting op/ed piece about how he thinks Twitter will change the way we live. I agree. In fact, I believe Twitter – or, at the least, SMS Group Messaging – will be the next iteration of email. Combine Twitter with Google’s new “Wave” (in beta testing) and I think we see the future of real-time, threaded conversations.

Here are some of Steven’s observations and predictions:

“as millions of devotees have discovered, Twitter turns out to have unsuspected depth. In part this is because hearing about what your friends had for breakfast is actually more interesting than it sounds. The technology writer Clive Thompson calls this “ambient awareness”: by following these quick, abbreviated status reports from members of your extended social network, you get a strangely satisfying glimpse of their daily routines. We don’t think it at all moronic to start a phone call with a friend by asking how her day is going. Twitter gives you the same information without your even having to ask.”

“Twenty years ago, the ideas exchanged in that conversation would have been confined to the minds of the participants. Ten years ago, a transcript might have been published weeks or months later on the Web. Five years ago, a handful of participants might have blogged about their experiences after the fact.”

I personally believe that what Twitter has done is create an in-road for leveraging Text Messaging (SMS) in a new way. Regardless of Twitter’s success or demise, what they created will continue. Twitter is the new email.

ChristandPopCulture.com – A Theology of Twitter

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

A very interesting and detailed article was written almost one year ago. I just found this gem and wanted to share it with you. You can read the entire article here.

A few solid quotes from the article:

Twitter provides another opportunity to maintain and encourage community amongst people who they would otherwise not have the opportunity to know.

If there is one thing that has suffered in our age it is relationships. People have very little time to cultivate relationships, share concerns and hopes, and make their needs known. When we do see one another, it’s hard to know what to say, because we simply don’t know where anyone is coming from. Instead, we spend most of our time hanging out, trying to get to that point where we can find some frame of reference or connection.

While we need to acknowledge that a virtual, internet relationship is really no relationship at all, we also need to be honest and acknowledge what can be the real world benefit of knowing, for instance, that I’ve been thinking of doing some freelancing work, playing PS3 a LOT lately, and meditating on the vanity of life. This sort of knowledge makes the conversation a heck of a lot more meaningful and challenging when we come together on the weekend. By knowing what’s happening in one another’s lives, we know how to speak truth to one another, how to pray for one another, and how to serve one another.

Oklahoman News: Tweet spirit growing

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

A regional newspaper talked with several churches of varying sizes and denominations to better understand the value and power of Twitter for churches. The article states “Trendsocial networking tool helps churches reach out, stay in touch”.

The article uses Scriptural references in additions to quotes from pastors and lay leaders, a first that I’ve seen in these news reports. Here are a few key quotes from the article, which you can read here:

“It doesn’t replace a lot of things — it doesn’t replace church, community or being with people — but it is another way to keep connected. We view it as a way for a leader to communicate with a lot of followers without a lot of extraneous (effort).” – Dale Swanson, Victory Church, Executive Pastor

“The Rev. Dave Evans, 53, senior pastor of Highland Baptist Church in Moore, OK, said he realized 150 to 200 members of his congregation were members of Facebook. He said he decided to try Facebook and Twitter for the outreach opportunities. Evans said Twitter has allowed him to follow the day-to-day lives of others and lets them do the same with him. “It is a way to offer prayer, support and encouragement to each other,” he said.

The Rev. George Back, 67, longtime dean of St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, said his church, 127 NW 7, has about 70 people connected to its Facebook page. He said each day, more people are following its tweets on Twitter, though the church only joined the latter a few weeks ago. He said social networking seems to meet a need in a society where lots of people don’t know other people in their immediate vicinity very well. ”If you think back 100 years, people were meeting in the store or the bank. Now people are driving from place to place; they’re pressing the button and going into the garage and not seeing their neighbor,” Back said. ”Today, they are encountering one another in different ways. This enables a process that has been short-circuited by modern times. In that sense, it’s not brand-new; it’s a resurgence of something that was lost and now is found — that ongoing connection.”

United Methodists & Twitter

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

The United Methodist Reporter, a print and online publication, recently interviewed me for a feature story on how Methodist churches are using Twitter. http://www.umportal.org/article.asp?id=5306