The church as a community hot-spot

An interesting question was posed today… Is there a way a church could take advantage of Wi-Fi being made available during a Sunday morning?
Some ideas that were mentioned are for encouraging people to bring their own laptop so they could:

    * send instant emails of comments, questions about the message that we could be responded to later by staff
    * search the web-site for community group info
    * search the web-site for info about all ministries
    * go to the blog to respond to the message or other ideas
    * link up to a Bible program with different translations to follow along with the text

Here are some of my initial thoughts…
I dunno. It’s an interesting idea. And three things come to mind:

    * power plug access is limited
    * will it be more of a distraction than a help?
    * will is separate more than unite?

I find that I can be easily distracted myself sometimes just with my cell phone or other people’s cell phones via text messages or random phone calls.
Also, I thought about this last night during our community group meeting and wondered about it. I used an e-mail survey that members of our group had forwarded and answered earlier in the week as an ice breaker (one of those answer these questions and forward to your friends to see their answers e-mails).
I thought it would be fun to see what people remembered about each other and knew about each other. Yet as we discussed the questions and answers I felt bad for those who didn’t have e-mail or who hadn’t accessed their e-mail during the week.
It was like we had some sort of “exclusive” that they were left out of.
Same thing for Valentines Day – I felt a little bad asking, “What was your favorite V-Day gift” and having two single guys in our group not really answer.
Several people with “mates” didn’t mention a gift from their mate but I felt like the single guys were left out because they were single – and most singles tend to be anti-Valentine.
What if instead of everyone bringing their own computer we set up free e-mail accounts for members with the church’s domain?
I think that can be done pretty easily (if not free) with Google handling the mail.
Then we could set up several computers with limited access so people can search the blog, respond to email etc., before and after church.
Computers could be set up in the lobby or our meeting room and let people take 5-10 minutes to check their e-mails.
It would also give us away to communicate announcements with folks who don’t have Internet access at work or home.
I can’t find specific numbers for America but I would guess that around 25-percent of our regulars don’t have Internet access or e-mail.
We don’t want to leave them out or make them feel left out. But if we could provide a service to them then maybe they would feel even more included.
Also, the numbers with laptops may even be less.
I don’t know if we should discourage people from bringing their laptops, but I don’t know that we’d want to encourage it.
So what are your thoughts? Is your church taking advantage of Wi-Fi technology? Has your church become a community hot-spot? Why or why not?

Bush takes a look under the hood

On Friday, President Bush took a look under the hood of two plug-in electric cars at the White House, including an electric pickup truck by Phoenix Motorcars.
Bush made a short speech to reiterate his State of the Union Address saying: “I firmly believe that the goal I laid out, that Americans will use 20 percent less gasoline over the next 10 years is going to be achieved, and here’s living proof of how we’re going to get there.
Along with the truck, a Toyota Prius was also on display.
The Prius on display had a high-power lithium-ion battery made by A123 Systems. It can power the car for about 40 miles and recharge in five hours. The white truck, made by Phoenix Motorcars, uses a different kind of high-powered battery made by Altair Nanotechnologies. The battery has a range of 130 miles and can be recharged in about 10 minutes with a rapid-charging unit or trickle-charged overnight with its onboard charger.
Watch video here
Read the New York Times article.
Via Treehugger.

State of the Christian blogosphere

The results of the recent Christian blogger survey have been released.
367 Christian bloggers
responded with the bulk of their ages in their 30’s. 136 of the respondents, or 37% were between 31 and 40 years old.
Twentysomethings made up 24% of the bloggers.
One of the most impressive statistics in the survey was that 128 respondents were “senior pastors,” the largest group of the survey. Second was “associate pastor/minister” with 77. “Layperson/church member” with 67. Another 42 listed “church staff.”
I wonder if those results had anything to do with where the survey was advertised. The survey was sponsored by
Church Communications Pro as well as Rick Warren’s Ministry Toolbox. If it had been advertised elsewhere I wonder if the results would have been different.
To see the complete results, click here.

Energy efficient web design

According to some smarter than me IT folks, using a white background on a website sucks up more wattage than using a black background. I would assume that that’s the same as using a word processor with a white page/background all day. Mark Ontkush suggests that if Google were to change their code and present their home page on a black background it could save $75,000 worldwide.
To alleviate the issue, Ontkush redesigned his website with an energy efficient color scheme. Not a bad idea. Maybe I should try the same thing with SSL 3.0.