Archive for May, 2009
Welcoming a New Programmer
May 20th
Keith, the newest addition to the development team at Olive Tree Bible Software, is onboard and working hard to bring you an updated Symbian reader. We know this is going to be great news for the many, many people who have written us about wanting to get a BibleReader program on their Nokia 5800s.
Keith is an experienced programmer, having begun back in 1986 as a Programmer/Systems Analyst for the Boeing Fabrication Divisions Tooling System, and later serving as a SME (Subject Matter Expert) for Boeing Computer Services in the C and C++ programming languages.
Keith’s passion for Bible study and programming came together in 1995 when he began work as a C++ programmer for the BibleSoft product, an early and groundbreaking PC software program that targeted the Biblical academic community. Keith worked with BibleSoft over a 10-year period, alternating his programming duties for BibleSoft with his service as a missionary to Papua New Guinea, where Keith and his wife pioneered a Bible School in addition to doing evangelism and medical outreach while serving in the field.
Keith and his wife returned from the mission field to live in the Spokane area. With BibleSoft winding down its business, Keith was ready for his next software project. His experience with programming made him a great hire for any company, and he spent some time working for a local game development company. But his passion for Bible software would eventually lead him to Olive Tree. What more perfect combination of events could there be than a mobile device Bible software company needing a programmer in Spokane, and a Bible software programmer just happening to move there?
“I’m excited about getting back into Bible software development for Olive Tree.” explains Keith. “We are rapidly moving ahead into new technologies in the mobile industry such as Symbian and Google Android. I will be working on the Symbian S60 platform which covers over 45 percent of the world market in mobile OS. Lord willing, the years I have spent in Bible study, Bible Software development, and missions work will help me better serve our customers by making the Word of God both come ‘Alive’ and be close to them.”
Please welcome Keith to Olive Tree, and look for more additions to the team in the weeks and months ahead as we continue to present quality tools for Bible reading and study. As a fitting close to this blog post, Keith quotes Deuteronomy 6:6-9:
6 “And these words which I command you today shall be in your heart.
7 You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up.
8 You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes.
9 You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.”
How eBibleReading is Different From eBook Reading
May 5th
Rumors abound about the new Kindle® devices that will be released soon. Some Olive Tree users have been wondering: What makes BibleReader different from Kindle, or from other eBook readers?
The main difference is that BibleReader is tailored to the experience of reading and studying the Bible. BibleReader is Bible-centric technology. In contrast, reviewers have pointed out that Kindle is “dominated by the book metaphor.” Kindle reads and handles almost exactly like a book (and not like a magazine, reference work, newspaper, or website). If all you read is fiction, or linear non-fiction—books where you start on page one and read, page by page, straight through to the end, the way you’d read a novel—then Kindle and other traditional eBook readers may work well for you.
But as anyone who has done any Bible reading or study can tell you, that’s not the way most people interact with their Bibles. Certainly, reading the Bible from cover to cover is a valuable practice, and if you’ve never done it, you should try it at least once. But for many people, daily Bible reading and study takes place in primarily non-linear ways.
And that’s where the specialized features and usability of BibleReader come into play.
- Say you want to open your Bible to a specific place—not just the third chapter of the book of John, but John 3:16 exactly. BibleReader’s Verse Chooser lets you navigate quickly to any verse in the Bible.
- Suppose you wonder how the word “spirit” is used throughout the Bible. BibleReader’s search function lets you look up every occurrence of the word “spirit” in both the Old and New Testaments. And when you scroll through the search results, it takes just one click to open the Bible of your choice to that verse.
- What if you’re reading Nehemiah, and you need more historical background on the Temple and its importance in Jewish culture to really understand what’s going on in the story? BibleReader’s versified commentaries let you switch to the commentary of your choice that opens right to Nehemiah, or wherever you were reading in your Bible.
- BibleReader’s split-screen reading makes commentary or other Bible reference works instantly available as you read—the two screens are linked so your commentary is always open to the right verse. Or you can use split screens to read two different Bible translations side-by-side.
- Many Bibles have additional information like textual notes, cross-references, or Strong’s numbers. BibleReader includes hyperlinked notes that are available with one touch.
- If you make a personal note on a specific verse in the Bible, you can access these notes in any Bible version, tied to the same verse.
While you might not need any of these functions while reading an eBook, reading the Bible is a different story. BibleReader was created with the unique experience of Bible reading in mind, and its features are designed to let you get the most out of your Bible reading and study.
