Jan 29 2009

FUN Physics

A couple weeks ago a guy at work sent me a link to a really cool little software package called Phun. It is a very neat little "physics sandbox" as they refer to it. You can create new shapes/objects in the software and then these objects act like objects in the real world (i.e. they are affected by gravity, friction, etc.). If you haven't downloaded it and played with it - you should. I downloaded it at home and showed my kids and they have been playing with it since. They love it.

Today I read about another PC app like Phun, but done as a game - Crayon Physics. This reminded me that last night my sons talked to me about buying yet another iPhone/iPod application called Fantastic Contraption. This application is also like phun as well. So maybe this is the future direction of games and applications - working on a PC like we are working in reality. Something seems a little strange with this transition. Whatever happened to going outside and throwing the football and seeing how gravity affects it and how it bounces off your face, etc. :)

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Jan 23 2009

22 Weeks

This is the name of a short film that tells the true and tragic story of a young woman whose abortion goes horribly wrong. Beware, this a rough read. 
Read a post about it here.

The official film site: 22 Weeks 

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Jan 22 2009

Why Are We Striving To Make Abortion Unthinkable?

The original Post can be found here. Author: John Ensor, Vice President of Heartbeat International and author of Answering the Call: Saving Innocent Lives, One Woman At a Time.

Today I join hundreds of thousands in Washington, D.C., in the annual March for Life to publicly lament the death of 50 million preborn children and to pray for the day when abortion becomes unthinkable.

In doing so, I acknowledge the resistance, even offense, taken by many by asserting that abortion is the moral issue of our day. I am familiar with the claim that asserts equal concern for poverty, global warming, aids prevention, war, and more. All of these appear to me worth researching and debating, as iron sharpens iron, as to the various causes and possible solutions.

But abortion is not on par. I remember how and when I came to this conclusion. It was the week of February 12, 1990, as marked on the Newsweek magazine I was reading. Kim Flodin, in an article on why she did not counter-march for abortion rights, wrote, "I was pregnant, I carried two unborn children and I chose, for completely selfish reasons, to deny them life so that I could better my own" (My Turn).

There it was: a momentary lapse into honest concrete language about abortion from an advocate. No ancient Baal worshiper could have described the reasons for their child sacrifice better. I was stunned that it had to be stated so plainly for me to grasp the preeminent evil of it. It is not one issue among equal concerns. Abortion is our postmodern version of child sacrifice for the Me Generation. As such, it is an incomprehensible and unthinkable evil.

Unthinkable is the best word to describe it because that is the way God describes it. "The word of the LORD came to Jeremiah saying, . . . "They built the high places of Baal in the Valley of the Son of Hinnom, to offer up their sons and daughters to Molech, though I did not command them, nor did it enter into my mind, that they should do this abomination" (Jeremiah 32:35; cf. 7:31, 19:5).

Among the many ways we offend God, the greatest offense are the shedding of innocent blood and idolatry. These two come together in child sacrifice. At the outset, God taught Israel to be shocked and repulsed by its practice among other cultures. "You shall not worship the Lord your God in that way, for every abominable thing that the Lord hates they have done for their gods, for they even burn their sons and their daughters in the fire to their gods" (Deuteronomy 12:31). The word even here rings remarkably close in meaning to unthinkable or something that "did not enter into my mind."

Some years ago, a woman named Suzanne came to me while I was setting up a pregnancy-help clinic in Boston. She said, "If I have the abortion, I will have more money to spend on my other two children." I asked, "What do you think your children would say if they knew you were doing this so that they could have cable TV and other stuff?" She said, "Well, I'll ask them." Then and there I knew the baby would live. Abortion is unthinkable to children--incomprehensible, horrific, something that would never enter their minds to do. Sure enough, the children were aghast at the thought. "We want the baby," they reassured her. Some months later, after the baby arrived, I heard her share her story. She said she was embarrassed to think back on her earlier state of mind. She had joined the circle of those who think abortion unthinkable.

Sanctity of Human Life Week is like Good Friday--a sobering time to stare unflinchingly past the ho-hum of abortion as a common practice; to grieve, lament, and morn; then to take up our cross and humbly obey God's call to "prosper" the cause of the fatherless and "defend the rights of the needy" (Jeremiah 5:28). In this context, that means becoming cross-bearers for child-bearers.

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Jan 21 2009

Mid-South Food Bank

My team at work volunteered to sort donated items at The Food Bank last year. It was a good and fun experience. Now the Memphis .NET Users Group is holding a food drive for them.

 

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Jan 18 2009

Syncing the iPhone With More Than One iTunes Library

I learned something today. I learned that you can only sync an iPhone with one and only one iTunes library. I downloaded a bunch of Podcasts on my PC at work and then loaded them on my iPhone. This is the first media on my iPhone. Then I came home and wanted to put some music on my phone from the iTunes library on my PC at home. The silly thing wouldn't let me drag and drop music on my iPhone. I noticed that the option to manually manage music and videos wasn't checked. Well, as soon I checked it, the sync button lit up. I clicked on the sync button and then I got a popup alerting me that my iPhone could only be synced to one library. I was faced with the option to close or to erase and sync with the library on this PC. After much debate within my head (and figuring that I didn't have much to lose, just a few podcasts) I clicked to erase and sync. Well, sure enough it took off my podcasts. I thought, this is going to be frustrating because I want to get my podcasts while at work, but my music at home. Well, a little googling and I found a fairly simple way to set up iTunes on multiple PCs so that the same iPhone can sync with them all. Here is the blog post from Andrew Grant. I downloaded a free Hex Editor HexEdit and followed the instructions and it worked the first time. When doing the find in the Hex Editor, mske sure you set your search "hex". A big thank you to Andrew Grant for his excellent help with this. Good Luck!

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Jan 17 2009

Three Main Steps to Starting Family Worship

My Pastor recently blogged about starting family worhsip. I thought is was great. You see the original post here.

Here they are:

  1. Plan to have family worship after an evening meal
  2. Read through a good book (like this one)
  3. Say the Lord’s prayer after reading the book

Now for the more full explanation. When I first discovered the tradition of family worship, it was a real breakthrough for me and my family. Although it took a while to get past the awkwardness of the moment, since we had not done this before, it is well worth the effort. But to start off, we need to keep it very simple.

I have discovered that men who have not lead their families this way are generally uncomfortable with starting this out. Two things usually stand out as concerns: 1) they do not pray well, and 2) they cannot explain the Bible well. So my advice for starting this tradition deals with those specific objections, and makes things as simple as possible.

First, plan to have family worship after the evening meal. It is usually the best time to accomplish this because everyone is settling down for the evening. If you do not eat together as a family, then start doing it. If you want to pick one night, pick Saturday night to start, and that way you are connecting your Saturday evening into your Sunday worship. As you do this, you can expand to other nights. But as you begin, do not do it every night. You are setting yourself up for failure.

Second, read through a good book. My suggestion is the Jesus Storybook Bible. We read through this book as a family, and I love it. Guess what…so did my kids! The great thing about this book is it explains stuff. So this will take away the initial worry of trying to explain a Bible passage that you do not understand. And as you read this, your kids will start asking you to read it after every meal, not just the Saturday evening meal! They will want to finish that book and go onto to more books. After the Jesus Storybook Bible, try The Big Picture Story Bible and The Child’s Story Bible.

Third, once you finish reading the book, say the Lord’s Prayer together as a family. Make sure you say it the same way (i.e., debts or trespasses), but just say the Lord’s Prayer. Overtime, you can add to this, but in my opinion, this is the best way to start at first.

So here you go: after you finish your Saturday evening meal, pull the book out, say you are going to read a short chapter about the Bible to get everyone reading for worship on Sunday. Read it. Pray the Lord’s Prayer as a family.

As you advance at this, you can add more to it. I noticed that Tim Challies pointed to a website with lots of resources. Joel Beeke has a short booklet on this topic, and Terry Johnson’s book on the subject is very good and comprehensive; he will direct you to other resources as well. But whether you are starting out or have been doing this for a while, don’t make it into a burden. You will defeat your purpose if you treat this as a strict discipline. Your kids need to enjoy this, and if you include them and keep it simple at first, they will help you build it into more.

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Jan 13 2009

Testing my new blog writer on my iPhone

This actually looks like this is going to work! Woo hoo!

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Jan 13 2009

Best Job in The World

You have to check this out. I'm in - you?

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Jan 11 2009

Bye Bye Epix... Hello Blackberry or iPhone?

Well, the Epix was pretty cool, but considerably more clunky than the Blackberry I used to own. That wasn't that big of a deal, however, I live in a rural area and obtaining and maintaining a data/phone connection with this phone was bad! I had gotten my wife an LG Shine and that didn't work worth a dime either. So it is back to the drawing board for now. My Blackberry worked pretty good out here when I had it, so I may go back with the Curve or maybe the Bold, or, I am considering the iPhone. Now I have to figure out how to return these phones and get new ones heading my way...

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Jan 10 2009

Just Received: Samsung i907 Epix SmartPhone

Recieved it today. Now, I am trying to load up my contacts. Hmm, I have my contacts in Lotus Notes. But the Epix, being a Windows Mobile SmartPhone only syncs with contacts in Outlook. Pretty frustrating. I have exported my contacts in every possible form out of Notes, and not one of the options does a clean job of exporting. But even if the exports were clean, I have to have Outlook installed to import to. Guess what, I don't have Outlook on my PC. UUgghh!!

Here is a link to a helpful blog post to load contacts into WM from a CSV formated file. It requires you install PIM Backup freeware software.

I may have to work on the contacts another day. But now, I want to get Google Talk on my new phone. Hmmm, it is not in the IM software already loaded. Is there a client for WM for Gtalk? I have been looking, but not found much on this so far.  I have found OctroTalk and Fring. I haven't tried hard to get OctroTalk to work, but I downloaded it and put it out on the phone, but it doesn't work. Maybe I need to install it. I tried through the sync software, but it didn't sem to like it. I don't really know what all I am doing just yet, so some of this may be due to my ignorance. I think I may look into Fring and see if I can get it working.

Update: Fring was super easy to download, install and setup on my new Windows Mobile SmartPhone. I highly recomend it!!

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