Justo Gonzalez spoke at Fuller's Chapel today. He articulated the way the process of translation across the boundaries of language and culture have been a part of the Christian story from the very beginning (Pentecost). This means that no one language or culture has a corner on the gospel message and all of us know it most fully when we are engaged in conversations across those boundaries. This notion is central to my understanding of the Christian faith and it was a pleasure to hear it stated so well.
I'm well past the honey-moon period with my studies at Fuller but I can still say with honesty that the seminary understands this fact and is further along the slow journey moving towards reflecting this reality than any other school I know of.
If you are interested in reading some of Justo Gonzalez' profound and profoundly accesible prose but are intimidated by his massive works of Church history, let me recommend the slim volume, Santa Biblia: the Bible Through Hispanic Eyes, which focuses on the issue of translation and looks within the Bible itself for guidance on how this process unfolds.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Open and Closed Case
WHY OPEN MATTERS
Lately I've been having entirely too much fun playing with the real-time sample cutting/cueing software called mlrV (see it in action below here). mlrV was built to run on the monome (pictured here): an open source hardware project (all the specs and circuits are freely available and no attempt is made to protect intellectual property) that runs open source software written in a special audio-programming environment called MaxMSP.
The monome is hard to explain because it doesn't do anything on its own out of the box. It is a sound controller. It provides a physical interface to control what a computer does with sound. It's just a grid of buttons with lights under them.
But the open-endedness of the project is also its strength. mlrV is only one of dozens of powerful programs, written by scarily intelligent and talented music-nerds posted and supported for free here. Such is the power of open source software + open source hardware.
To make my point further, I don't even own a monome. They are in such high demand that they sell out in seconds after they go on sale despite their $500-$1000 price-tags. I couldn't find one to buy. But last November a British company called Novation built this sound controller called the the launchpad.
Look familiar? It's made to control another more comprehensive, expensive and wonderful software called Ableton Live. Also it costs less than half of the price of the cheapest monome because it's mass-produced in China instead of lovingly hand-crafted in the Catskills.
This is open development at its best. Not simply because I got a powerful tool for free or more cheaply (though this is a common outcome) but because the creators were willing to let the cultural/creative process happen without trying to lock it down so they could make more money from it. There is a willingness to prioritize the broader cultural or community benefit over individual financial gain. You either love music more or you love money more. Apparently the people behind the monome love music more.
WHAT CLOSED MEANS
Also tonight, I was reading an a post (on my iPhone) from a blog called Create Digital Music. The author was arguing that Apple's new iPad while very shiny and cool, is ultimately a step in the wrong direction. I've heard these arguments before but tonight I became convinced. And it has everything to do with control.
First: control of the software. Apple's made no secret of controlling who gets an app in their store and often they block good apps for no good reason and let in thousands of bad apps. But it's the apps (like this life-changing one) that make the iPhone such a useful and interesting device. The size, connectivity and touch-screen have changed the way we use computers, despite Apple's capriciously run app store.
Second: control of the hardware. I have spent a good 3-4 hours total attempting to restore to working order a perfectly good iPhone a friend of a friend gave to me. The problem is that he tried to "jailbreak" the phone so he could run apps other than the ones Apple sells in its store. Normally if a computer's software gets messed up you would just reset the phone back to factory settings ("restore" in iTunes). But because of the escalating war between the people who find ways get around Apple's tight control over their phones, and the people at Apple who then create more ways to maintain control, this is no longer possible.
Now if you want to restore your phone in iTunes (even if you haven't attempted to "jail-break" it), iTunes has to check the software and your hardware against its records on a server somewhere they control. If they don't like the software you're using to restore it, or if they think you have restored it too many times, or in a suspicious way, they terminate the restore process remotely.
Days after the launchpad was released a clever hacker wrote a piece of code in MaxMSP that lets the launchpad use (almost) all the free open-source software written for the monome. The response of the people who make the monome? "Good work. We love what you're doing to expand the project."
This is open development at its best. Not simply because I got a powerful tool for free or more cheaply (though this is a common outcome) but because the creators were willing to let the cultural/creative process happen without trying to lock it down so they could make more money from it. There is a willingness to prioritize the broader cultural or community benefit over individual financial gain. You either love music more or you love money more. Apparently the people behind the monome love music more.
WHAT CLOSED MEANS
Also tonight, I was reading an a post (on my iPhone) from a blog called Create Digital Music. The author was arguing that Apple's new iPad while very shiny and cool, is ultimately a step in the wrong direction. I've heard these arguments before but tonight I became convinced. And it has everything to do with control.
First: control of the software. Apple's made no secret of controlling who gets an app in their store and often they block good apps for no good reason and let in thousands of bad apps. But it's the apps (like this life-changing one) that make the iPhone such a useful and interesting device. The size, connectivity and touch-screen have changed the way we use computers, despite Apple's capriciously run app store.
Second: control of the hardware. I have spent a good 3-4 hours total attempting to restore to working order a perfectly good iPhone a friend of a friend gave to me. The problem is that he tried to "jailbreak" the phone so he could run apps other than the ones Apple sells in its store. Normally if a computer's software gets messed up you would just reset the phone back to factory settings ("restore" in iTunes). But because of the escalating war between the people who find ways get around Apple's tight control over their phones, and the people at Apple who then create more ways to maintain control, this is no longer possible.
Now if you want to restore your phone in iTunes (even if you haven't attempted to "jail-break" it), iTunes has to check the software and your hardware against its records on a server somewhere they control. If they don't like the software you're using to restore it, or if they think you have restored it too many times, or in a suspicious way, they terminate the restore process remotely.
The net outcome is that I have a perfectly good piece of hardware on my desk the software of which is still being controlled by the company that made it, even though it has already been bought and has changed hands three times. The simple reason is that if they can retain control they can make more money. Apparently they love money more than they love the cultural/creative process that is the development of technology: hardware and software.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Speed Sketching Musicians
Speed sketching is about catching the movement impact or emotion of a subject in as quick a time as possible and often with as few gestures as possible. Whenever I hear musicians performing it always makes me feel like playing along with them. Lately I've started trying to draw them while playing. Normal people are hard enough to draw but musicians are often in constant motion.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Paintings for a Wedding
Dave and Tera are getting married tomorrow. They asked some of their friends who do art to paint some paintings of places they've visited to serve as place cards for the reception. I had fun picking a couple of places in Singapore I've actually visited. Once the wedding is over they will collect all twenty-something paintings and frame them as one crowd-sourced piece of art.
Bonus points for people who know the names of these buildings
Bonus points for people who know the names of these buildings
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Evinrude St. Sebastian III
Protector
Last Summer when I was taking time off from classes to rest up for the birth of the new baby, I went on a science fiction binge. One of the most fun books I read was Larry Niven's "Protector." It's about a man who gets exposesd to a catalytic enzyme that triggers a sort of metamorphasis transforming his body and super-charging his mind. This how I imagined him.
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