{"id":3802,"date":"2011-10-17T10:08:07","date_gmt":"2011-10-17T09:08:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/richardlittledale.wordpress.com\/?p=3802"},"modified":"2011-10-17T10:08:07","modified_gmt":"2011-10-17T09:08:07","slug":"bubbles-and-habits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/176.32.230.12\/richardlittledale.co.uk\/2011\/10\/17\/bubbles-and-habits\/","title":{"rendered":"Bubbles and habits"},"content":{"rendered":"
Reflections on #CNMAC11 – number one<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n If you ever read comics as a child, you will know that speech bubbles have smooth edges, like this:<\/p>\n <\/a>A thought bubble, on the other hand, has fuzzy edges, and looks like this:<\/a>\u00a0The secret, it would seem, is in the fuzzy edges.<\/p>\n Earlier this year, in the most popular post<\/a> this blog has ever seen, I wrote about the possibility of tweeting in church, and maybe even of running a Twitterfall<\/a> during a sermon. On Saturday, at the Christian New Media Conference, I got to see what that might look like. The thing is, despite my earlier post on Twitter as a speech bubble symphony<\/a>, in fact this was more like an exchange of thought bubbles, with their fuzzy edges. Scrolling down the screens was everything from incisive parries with the speaker’s argument to updates on the rugby, and comment’s on the speaker’s attire! In short – we were made privy to the exchange of thought which\u00a0accompanied\u00a0the act of speech in the room.<\/p>\n When I went a little later to a seminar hosted the altogether lovely Sister Catherine Wybourne<\/a>, she introduced it by assuring us that there would be no such\u00a0gimmicks\u00a0as the Twitterfall to be seen. In all truth, I am glad, as my Twitter thought stream would have run something like this (click for larger view) :<\/p>\n