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Andy Davis (feat. Seth Philpott) - “That’s Where My Head Is (Live)”
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
Andy Davis (feat. Seth Philpott) - “That’s Where My Head Is (Live)”
What is TED?
TED is a small nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from three worlds: Technology, Entertainment, Design. Since then its scope has become ever broader.
Go to TED.com and watch, be inspired.
Seth Godin on clichés:
In printing, a cliché was a printing plate cast from movable type. This is also called a stereotype. When letters were set one at a time, it made sense to cast a phrase used repeatedly as a single slug of metal. “Cliché” came to mean such a ready-made phrase. The French word “cliché” comes from the sound made when the matrix is dropped into molten metal to make a printing plate.
His secret weapon on how to use clichés:
The effective way to use a cliché is to point to it and then do precisely the opposite. Juxtapose the cliché with the unexpected truth of what you have to offer. …. I often use the Encyclopedia of Clichés to find clichés that then inspire opposites.
(via bobulate)




On the roof - fixing the antenna
It almost goes without saying that regardless of whether we win or not, the point of the song, our entire careers, and really the whole Christian Music Industry is to point honor towards Jesus. That we would see Him more clearly, love Him more dearly and follow Him more nearly (thanks DC Talk).
My Soul Sings - Delirious from Kingsway Communications on Vimeo.
My Soul Sings from the live event in Columbia
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Rockharbor - “Only You Can Satisfy”
The new Rockharbor Album went up on iTunes this week. If you have yet to get a copy, hope on over to iTunes and grab it, it’s great. (iTunes Link)
A few day ago I posted about the iPad and that I was thinking of ways it could be used for better worship experiences. I then asked for some ideas… no one commented here at the blog, but Facebook provided much insight and humor.
Nate Lotz - maybe it could be used so that the pastor could directly interact with and control and power point slides while being able to highlight things, circle, zoom in, surf the internet to show videos… all live in the service
Kyle Steven Bonenberger - Nate… don’t get me started. I might do it.
Jeff Spurlock - You can do all that for 200$ with an iPod touch
Joel Hasemeyer - Download the “Tongues of Fire” app, and then everyone could hold it over their heads to re-enact Pentacost.
Kyle Steven Bonenberger - Joel’s idea is simply brilliant. Is that seriously an app? Downloading it right now if it’s real…