I like surprises. Whether it is my birthday, Father’s Day, or any day, I like surprises. When I discovered Outreach by Lancaster Baptist Church, I was surprised. Why? Well, it’s not often you find independent Baptist churches developing an app for iOS devices. It’s exciting to see a church making an effort to develop useful evangelistic and visitation tools for those in ministry.

Outreach is a visitation/soulwinning contact management app. With it you can record your visits, phone calls, and followups on your iPhone or iPad. The app is not fancy, but it’s simple UI makes it easy to use. You can add in a prospect as an individual or couple. There are a number of lists including Sunday School prospects, Church Prospects, Members, Salvation Prospects, and more. You can also create your own custom lists. The app  features an activity log that allows you to record just about any visit not just evangelistic visits. You could record church member visits or phone calls and make notes, so that the next time you visit or call, you’ll remember details about the visit.

You can also view a simple stats page that details the number of visits, phone calls, saved, baptized in total and over the last 30 days. Now numbers shouldn’t be the be-all-end-all, but it does give a good idea of our effectiveness and faithfulness.

I like the app and glad to see something like this available. Hopefully, LBC will continue to develop this app. I’d like to see a way to import a contact from my address book rather than typing in all the information. Also the activity log is great, but you cannot delete an activity, nor do the activities organize themselves by date. It would also be good to see an export or another way to backup your data. A few tweaks like these could make this app even better. It’s a great start and was a good surprise for me in the App Store. At $.99 and a universal app, it’s a good buy.

Outreach app description below.

“We all desire to be more effective reaching others with the gospel, seeing them baptized and added to a local church. Striving Together is happy to announce a new tool that can help you follow up on your prospects more effectively. The Outreach mobile app has been developed by the technical team of Lancaster Baptist Church under the direction of Pastor Paul Chappell.

Once installed you can track the progress of each of your soulwinning prospects— you can quickly view a map to their home, make a phone call, and record each contact and spiritual decision. You can also view and organize your prospects into custom lists.”

Outreach mobile app

 

Recently at the Christian college I serve at, my position changed. That change brought new responsibilities, meetings, projects, and a need to muscle my task list and calendar into one app on my iPhone. For the last few months, I used a simple and elegant calendar app called Calvetica and a closely styled todo cousin called TeuxDeux, but necessity drove me to find something that would meet my needs better. Leaving those apps were like moving away from close friends.

Enter my new hired purchased muscle from off the bench: Pocket Informant. It was an app that I had picked up during a sale a few months ago. I tried it out then, but decided it was too much for what I needed. Now, it handles my day to task scheduling like Popeye on spinach.

It reminds me of the Palm app Datebk6, one of which I used quite religiously as a Palm T|E owner. The Today view (my fav) helps me to see all the day’s tasks and appointments at a glance. It takes longer to enter a todo or appointment then my previous app companions, but you have the means to be as detailed as you need with each task or event.

For some a two app system may work, for me it didn’t. I have a much more effective system with Pocket Informant. At $12.99, Pocket Informant is well worth it for the busy task-schedule-driven type.

 

Apple this past Thursday released their Mac App Store. A iTunes like store filled with apps just for your Mac. It holds a lot of promise despite some initial difficulties. Yet, I still like the prices seem more reasonable, my purchases are available on all my Macs, and software updates are easy. The Mac App Store seems like a win-win for both developers and users. Developers can create and then showcase their software in the Mac App Store no longer having to worry about building a new website or creating/managing user registration codes.

Now, the big question what did I buy on opening day? Well, here is the list. Continue reading »

Jan 082011
 

Finding software alternatives use to be quite difficult. You would have to use Google and type in something like “better than MS Office” or “MS Office alternatives.” And sure you’d find a some alternatives, but which ones really worked as a good alternative, that was the question. It often involved a great deal of time to search, install, learn, a new program. What is needed is a better method. After all, a pastor’s time is precious.

An alternative method already exists. It is called Alternativeto.net. This site helps you find the best software alternatives without you wasting your time. The site covers alternative software for Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, Android, Windows Phone, and more. The sites mission is simply: “helping you find the right software for your computer or mobile phone.” It’s a bookmark worthy site.

For instance, what are some alternatives to Photoshop? After all, most folks probably don’t need a full featured program like it or cannot afford it altogether. By typing “Photoshop” in Alternativeto’s search box, a list of alternatives is returned. What helps is other folks can “like” software (much “like” Facebook’s “like”), so you can see rather quickly what are the more popular alternatives. Once you click a software title, you will be taking to another page showing you alternatives to that software, plus a link to the software’s website, a summary, and compatible platforms. Very handy.

It’s a new year and time to start saving time. Toss out that ancient of days software search method and bookmark Alternativeto. Now, you can easily find the best software alternatives on the net. Let the new year ring!

 

If you are giving away an iPad (you generous soul you), iPhone, or iPod Touch this Christmas, GoodReader will be a great “accessory” to give with it. GoodReader is a PDF reader, picture viewing, text editor, PDF annotator/highlighter, video viewing, HTML and Safari webarcives viewing, and more. It is one of my most used apps on my iPhone 4.

I store and reference a number of work related PDFs and PDF newsletters I receive. GoodReader can connect to Dropbox (essential for me), Gmail (huge help), Google Docs, MobileMe disk, and other WebDav servers. It’s by far the best iOS PDF reader available. The app even gives you video and image viewing.

In their latest update, the folks of Goodiware added a faster PDF rendering engine to GoodReader speeding up PDF viewing. They continue to push GoodReader to greater heights. A worthy character trait for any developer. GoodReader sells for $2.99 in the App Store.

© 2012 Gadget Pastor Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha