That made me laugh out loud! Thanks for starting my morning off right.russellhltn wrote:Are we talking Palm Pilot era?lajackson wrote:It was quite a while ago.
Liz
That made me laugh out loud! Thanks for starting my morning off right.russellhltn wrote:Are we talking Palm Pilot era?lajackson wrote:It was quite a while ago.
I love that I have so much information available in a small, easy-to-carry form. However, when I read your post, I have to say, "WELL SAID."gilldavid wrote:The Church should pioneer electronic classrooms and wide dissemination of information. But there are at least three things a digital device in my hand cannot do: 1) allow me to look quickly from one verse to another, comparing the wording and context in careful examination of the writ, 2) browse the content with a feeling of familiarity and "I've been here many times before," and 3) share my love of the word (whether a scripture book or a lesson manual) with my neighbor who is new, sitting next to me in a classroom and thirsting for both instruction and fellowship. Strength in the gospel is ultimately about relationships (with God, family, and others); sending a link is fairly impersonal, and most digital media tend to isolate us as individuals rather than bring us together. That is the prize we should all keep our eyes on.
It was a serious question. In my mind, that's when electronic scriptures started. I'd think by the time the iPhone came along, most wards would have had at least one member with a Palm device and using it for their scriptures.lmcguire wrote:That made me laugh out loud! Thanks for starting my morning off right.russellhltn wrote:Are we talking Palm Pilot era?lajackson wrote:It was quite a while ago.
I'm a contrarian when it comes to each of the steps above, I think you hit the nail on the head when you said that these three things 'IN MY HAND' cannot do. Each of the above could either apply to you or not. My kids would not relate in any way with what you've said above.gilldavid wrote:The Church should pioneer electronic classrooms and wide dissemination of information. But there are at least three things a digital device in my hand cannot do: 1) allow me to look quickly from one verse to another, comparing the wording and context in careful examination of the writ, 2) browse the content with a feeling of familiarity and "I've been here many times before," and 3) share my love of the word (whether a scripture book or a lesson manual) with my neighbor who is new, sitting next to me in a classroom and thirsting for both instruction and fellowship. Strength in the gospel is ultimately about relationships (with God, family, and others); sending a link is fairly impersonal, and most digital media tend to isolate us as individuals rather than bring us together. That is the prize we should all keep our eyes on.
I don't doubt it - Palm provided my first e-scriptures too. For whatever reason, though, that comment made me laugh out loud (maybe I'm getting senile).russellhltn wrote:It was a serious question. In my mind, that's when electronic scriptures started. I'd think by the time the iPhone came along, most wards would have had at least one member with a Palm device and using it for their scriptures.
I understand #1, and hope one day they'll add to the Gospel Library the requested feature of viewing two content items side by side. (When I'm really desperate for this, I use two devices side by side.)gilldavid wrote:But there are at least three things a digital device in my hand cannot do: 1) allow me to look quickly from one verse to another, comparing the wording and context in careful examination of the writ, 2) browse the content with a feeling of familiarity and "I've been here many times before," and 3) share my love of the word (whether a scripture book or a lesson manual) with my neighbor who is new, sitting next to me in a classroom and thirsting for both instruction and fellowship. Strength in the gospel is ultimately about relationships (with God, family, and others); sending a link is fairly impersonal, and most digital media tend to isolate us as individuals rather than bring us together. That is the prize we should all keep our eyes on.
Get your laugh track back out, Liz.lajackson:
It was quite a while ago.
russellhltn:
Are we talking Palm Pilot era?
lmcguire:
That made me laugh out loud! Thanks for starting my morning off right.
russellhltn:
It was a serious question.
lajackson wrote:Get your laugh track back out, Liz.
I used to generate the ward directory from IBM 80-column punched cards. The new member gave me their information, I punched the card and inserted it into the deck. During the week I ran two copies of the updated directory, one for the new family and one for the bishop, on an IBM System 370 mainframe....