Archive Page 2

God Still loves us even without a lint roller

05Feb07

by Brandon Gross

I had one of those moments a few weeks back. You know… one of those moments that God decides he is going to teach you something and you are going to realize how little you really know or how little you remember. Yeah, it was one of those moments.

My fiance’ has this cat, that we so creatively named "lil kitty", who is one of those pretty cats. Everything she does is pretty. She sits pretty, walks pretty, she is even a pretty cat!!!! To mess with her sometimes I will rub her hair toward her head… she doesn’t like that…. why I do it, I don’t know… but it is fun. I would have never considered myself a cat person but lil kitty has made me different. I really like that cat. The only thing that I don’t like is how much she sheds.

I am honestly surprised that lil kitty is not bald based on how much she sheds. We always keep lint rollers around so we can get the hair off of us after we play with lil kitty. Well, this day we did not have any lint rollers. We had used the last one and the replacements were in the car, which was not in town. I usually sit on the couch to work and lil kitty likes to jump up on my lap and work with me on my laptop. I’m usually ok with this because after I’m done I can go grab the handy dandy lint roller to get all the "pretty" cat hair off of me. I couldn’t do that on this day and of all the days lil kitty could pick it was this day that she was overly persistent that she wanted my attention.

She would jump up on me, and I would put her right back down on the floor. It didn’t seem to make sense to her, so she would jump right back up on me again. We went through this routine for a few minutes until it hit me… this was one of those God moments and I was about to miss it. I don’t want to be one of those cat lovers that is talking about their pet like it is their kid but this moment hit me.

Lil kitty wanted my attention desperately. I didn’t want her to get on me because she would shed hair all over me and I didn’t have anything to clean it off… but she still wanted my attention. She didn’t understand why I didn’t want her to sit with me like she always had.. she’s a cat.. she understands mouse toy and food. But this started to make me think about God and me. I know there have been so many times I have shed my junk on him… but he always welcomes me back. He evens tells me to caste my burdens on him…

God knows we shed a lot… but like the prodigal son He waits for us to come to him as we are. The thing I learned from this little cat was persistence. Jesus taught us to knock and keep on knocking, ask and keep on asking, seek and keep on seeking and we will find what we need, the doors will be opened to us. God likes us to be persistent with him… not arrogant… but lovingly persistent in coming to him with our needs… just how we are. Max Lucado I think said it best when he wrote "God loves us exactly how we are but he is unwilling to leave us there." I’m glad that God is not worried about having a lint roller to show his love to me. He took care of all that already, all he wants from me is persistence in coming to him.

It took a small cat to remind me about pursuing God.

So, what did I do in all this? I picked up lil kitty and we worked on the computer like we always do… except this time I did not have a lint roller. I had hair all over me, but that was ok…. Lint roller… I didn’t need no stinking link roller.

how to buy church software

31Jan07

by Brandon Gross

If you have decided that it’s about time to get some kind of church software, there are a few things you should keep in mind that will save you a ton of time, money, and frustration. A few months back our Vice President, Bart Hardison, wrote a series of posts on buying church software. I thought it would be beneficial to go back into the attic, dust off those posts, and bring them back into the light.

To help you out I have linked the series of posts below:

Part 1 - How to Choose Church Management Software

Part 2 - Custom Software Development

Part 3 - Custom Software Development - Things to Consider

time to get organized - Part 3

26Jan07

by Brandon Gross

If you have been following along with us on our series "time to get organized" you should be at a place where you are ready to do something with your neatly stacked piles of papers on your desk. If you have not been following along you can start by reading the Part 1 of this series and then move on to Part 2 before coming back here. If you have already been following along, let’s get into what you should do with your piles.

At this point you should have 3 organized piles on your desk:

1. The Schedule Pile

2. The Someday-Maybe Pile

3. The Reference Pile

Let’s start with the Schedule Pile. This pile consist of all your half sheets of paper that you could not do in under 2 minutes. You have two ways that you can schedule these to be done. I will explain the way that David recommends and then what option I took. First off, David’s recommendation.

You should have a box of file folders and a box of hanging file folders, along with a Handheld label machine. David recommends creating what is called a "tickler file system". A tickler file system essentially is made up of 43 folders, 12 of the folders being the months of the year and the other 31 being the days. I have included a picture I found on google to illustrate a tickler file system:

Now the picture is not the easiest to read in the world but it will help you to understand how a tickler file system works. All the folders you see to the front of the series of files are date folders, 1 thru 31. Toward the middle of the picture you see a lone folder by itself, that would be the month you are in, so in this case it would be January. Then behind "January" you see about five more number folders, these would be past days. Then to the very back, the remaining months.

The rule of thumb for filing that David recommends is one file folder per hanging file folder. Now if you are like me I initially thought, "Wow, that could be a waste of hanging file folders" but I can tell you it definitely makes a difference. Yes, it cost’s a little more, but the benefit of it all being organized and everything being in its place is worth every penny.

To build a tickler file system you need to get 43 file folders. Using your hand held Label machine, print out the names of the 12 months and then print out the numbers 1 thru 31. You should have 43 stickers by the end of the printing. Now place the labels on the file folders, keep your numbers consecutive and your months as well. Now place each file folder into a hanging file folder and place the entire group in you filing cabinet.

This is how the tickler file system works. This month is January, so the folder January would be in the front of the months (which months are in the back and all the numbers are in the front). Now today is the 26th so the very first file, all the way to the front would be the number 26 file. *Note: when moving files move the entire file folder and hanging file folder, think of them as a group from now on that should not be separated.

There are 31 days in January so I would place the remaining dates behind the 26 folder. All the other number folders should go immediately behind the January folder in consecutive order. You should have something in the order like 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, January, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5…..so on, February, March, April… so on.

Using the Tickler File System:

Now that you have your tickler file system created it would be time to use it. This is how it works. You should go through your To Schedule stack and start placing tasks in different folders to be done. Do not place everything under one folder, you want to spread this out so that you can get it done. Since, today is the 26th I might not place anything in it since I am organizing but I would place the mowing the grass paper in the 27th folder and maybe the youth parent meeting in the 30th folder. I would also need to place some tasks to be done next month. That is why all the leftover numbers are consecutively behind the January folder. If you notice it already begins to set up the next month. So spread out your tasks over the next thirty one days. If you need to schedule something to be done a few months from now, place that piece of paper in the month folder and then when that months comes you will need to assign it to a date. At the end of the day you remove that days folder and place it to the back of the rest of the numbers. So today the 26th would go behind the 25th folder in front of February. If the folder you are moving still has stuff in it that you were not able to do, that stuff needs to be reassigned to another day before moving that folder. This will take some discipline but it creates an easy 3D calendar system that you can use to manage your tasks in a way that they get completed and you get results. Try it for a while, you may like it. Let me emphasize again though, make sure you use your label machine to write on the folders, it makes it so much easier to quickly glance at the folders and read them. We are going for easy, not just cheap…

What I do:

I have taken a much less involved approach. The tickler file was not really for me. Not that I do not like it, cause I do, but I have always been one of those people that likes to have everything right in front of me where I can see what is coming up easily… but it still be organized. To manage my "to schedule" tasks I went to the local office supply store and purchased a weekly/monthly planner. I looked through a lot of them and honestly the one I liked the most was the BlueSky Weekly/Monthly Planner. It has tabbed months, an overall month view, and a daily view all in a slim design that lays down easily on a table. I then went through my stack and scheduled my tasks on my calendar to be done in the daily view section. I basically re-copied what I had on the paper onto the calendar. Now, going this route takes a lot of discipline, especially if you have not been accustomed to using a planner. You have to start "living" by your planner. If you have tasks to be completed on a certain day… they need to be completed. If they are not completed… reschedule them. Also, I like to mark things off. So, when I complete something it gets a big mark through it. If you are having a rough day and nothing is getting accomplished you can do what I have done before, write down on your calendar… go to the bathroom or go eat lunch or something you have already done… THEN MARK IT OUT! There is just something about marking through items that gets you going and feeling like you are making progress. Yes, it’s a little silly but it does help to give you a jump-start because you want to keep marking things out.

What about everything else???

Now, you should either be using a tickler file system or a weekly planner, either works fine but both require discipline to stay with it. You should now have two leftover stacks of stuff on your desk. The Someday/Maybe pile and the Reference Pile. The someday/maybe pile should be scheduled just like the "to schedule" pile was. As some of the someday/maybe items may be packets of stuff, you do not want to place the packet in your tickler file system. If you choose to use the tickler files system then write down what it is that needs to be done, like reviewing the promotional material, and place the piece of paper in the tickler file system. Then place the someday/maybe item into a file folder that goes into a hanging file folder. You will need to print a label to reference the someday/maybe item and place it on the folder. For instance, maybe I am wanting to review a church software, like NSpire, and I had received a demo cd to look over. I would write on a half sheet of paper, "Review NSpire demo CD: Nspire Folder", I would then print a label that said NSpire on it and place it on a file folder. I would then put that file folder into a hanging file folder, drop the NSpire Demo CD into it and place it in another drawer of my filing cabinet.

I recommend that you have one drawer in your filing cabinet for the tickler file system and another drawer for your reference material. Again, remember… use labels only and one file folder per hanging file folder… this works the best. If you are not doing a tickler file system you should just schedule the task on your planner and do the same thing for referencing the someday/maybe item as I explained for the tickler file system. This should eliminate your someday/maybe pile.

Lastly, you have your reference pile. This is all the stuff that you need to have but just not immediately. Create a file folder for each item or small groups of items and place the file folder in a hanging file folder just like you did for the someday/maybe pile. After you have gone through this stack I recommend you go the the file cabinet drawer for all your reference folders and alphabetize them. This makes life so much easier when you need to find a reference item. I also went as far as doing the same thing for my CD-Roms. I have pictures below. After you have finished doing this you should have a clear desk and a reference drawer full of organized files and, if you choose, a tickler file system. You desk should be clear. Give yourself a pat on the back!!!

Staying organized…

Since you now have everything organized you need to keep it that way. This is where your inbox comes into play. You should put your inbox on your desk and that’s where everything goes that comes "in". You should run the process you have learned from the last three days on everything that goes into that inbox. Do not let items remain in your inbox at the end of the day. Something should happen to everything that comes into the inbox. If you can do it in less than 2 minutes then do it right then, if not… Defer it by scheduling it to be done and organized appropriately or Delegate it to someone else. When you leave at the end of the day you should have a empty inbox and a clear desk. This makes work so much nicer when you come in the next morning and everything is in its place ready for you to jump right in and start. I try to leave my office everyday with the desk clean and tasks scheduled. I can not explain to you how much nicer it is to come in to work the next morning and not have to fumble through files and remembering what something was.

Not only will this help you physically, getting the tasks assigned to you organized and under control is one of the first steps in being a good steward. God, will increase what you already have if you can show you can be faithful in stewarding what is small. This does not just relate to member numbers and paychecks either. God said that we can not even comprehend the things he has for us. This tells me that if I can be a good steward of what I do know he has given me I will not even be able to imagine what he will give me to steward over, for him.

Hopefully, this series has helped you in your organizational journey. As always, if you have questions, leave a comment and I will get back to you ASAP.

time to get organized - Part 2

25Jan07

by Brandon Gross

Today is the day… today you begin your quest on tackling that organizational nightmare that has been on your desk for the past 2 years… Today you start to win. If you are just joining us on this series "time to get organized" you should read yesterday’s post first and then come back here.

Yesterday, I gave you a list of supplies you should have in order to overcome your organizational dilemma. Most of these tips on organization come from David Allen’s book "Getting Things Done". I am not going to follow David’s tips in the precise order that he gives them and I will not be covering in this post all the tips he has to offer. My attempt here will be to give you some pointers that I have gained from his book and also some other things I found that work very well. So, lets get going!

At this point you should have:

1. File Folders
2. Green Hanging File Folders
3. A Filing Cabinet
4. A Hand Held Labeling Machine
5. 2 to 3 days of freed up time
6. You will also need 1 pack of Printer Paper… you should have this lying around somewhere.
6. And Band-aids…. just in-case there are any gruesome paper cut injuries during this process :)

So… Where do I start?

I’m going to break this down into phases to try to help you accomplish each step of the organizational process. Some of you are probably reading this post through piles of papers surrounding your monitor… well, this is one of the first things that has to change. Before you can get organized you need to categorize (do you like the rhyming there) what is in your way.

Phase 1 - Clear the Playing Field (aka. Demolition of the opposition)

Your desk is cluttered…. it’s time to fix that. This will take some time. What you need to do first is create a temporary system here in order to cut down on some of the needless stuff you have, (you might want to make sure your trash can is empty before starting on this one). This part is where the pack of Printer Paper will come in. Get a good stack of your blank printer paper and cut it in half (hamburger style). Now, take a minute to think of anything and everything you have on your plate to do or that requires your attention. Write one task per piece of paper. Ex. I have to call a child’s parent about an upcoming event. I would write "Call ,the child’s name, parents about the upcoming event" on one piece of paper. Don’t put any other task with this sheet of paper… I know it seems a little overkill but this is essential. After I have written my task on my half sheet of paper, put that task in a separate pile and continue to stack all the other "task papers" on top of it. Try to think of anything and everything that you need to do. This is not just limited to work… think about personal life… hobbies… outside work…. children… eating ice cream… everything that you need to do needs to be written on a half sheet of paper (remember… one task per piece of paper). This will probably take some time to do but you do not need to go any farther until you have completed this.

After you have exhausted everything you can think of mentally, its time to start looking at your computer calendar (outlook), desktop calendar, the blue-million post-it notes on your desk, random notes on the side of McDonald’s napkins, and everything in-between. We are in the gathering stage here. Look through all these things for tasks or requirements that you must do and transfer them to individual half sheets of paper as well; staying with the idea of one task per piece of paper. EX. You find a Phone Call note on your desk, ask yourself "Have I completed this" if not, transfer the note or tape it to a piece of paper, then add the paper to the stack you have been building. After you have transferred the note, trash the original, so if you took a note of the McDonald’s napkin, there is not need for the napkin any longer… feed it to the trash can. Continue to do this with all your tasks and jobs that you have to complete until you have a real big stack of half cut sheets of paper with you future life written on them. After you have completed this, gather everything else that is left on your desk into another pile for processing.

* Note: Left over food, wrappers, cans, and that green puff of what used to be a sandwich should be immediately forwarded to the feeding the trash can part :)

Phase 2 - The 2 minute mile

Now you should have two big piles of stuff on your desk… This is your life… your stuff.. and now we are going to sort it. The key here is the number 2. Start with your pile of half sheets of paper. You need to sort this pile into a few other piles. Start by grabbing the top sheet, now ask yourself a few questions:

1. What is this?

2. Is this Actionable? (An actionable item is something that requires action from me, like mowing the grass; a non-actionable item would be something like a real cool magazine that you like the graphics on and want to keep… but you shouldn’t have any of those in you half sheet pile at this time)

3. If it is actionable, What is the action?

4. Will it take less than 2 minutes? If it will take less than two minutes to do then stop what you are doing and finish that task right now.

5. If it will take more than 2 minutes to do, you should either Delegate it or Defer it. If you delegate it, then that piece of paper goes into the person’s box and it becomes theirs and you will be waiting for them to finish it. If you Defer it, you need to schedule it on your calendar to be completed or put it in your inbox to be done as soon as you can. (Be careful here not to get to happy on deferring tasks to your inbox to be done as soon as you can… That’s probably how you got into this place to begin with. I prefer to schedule tasks on my calendar so I can spread out the load and I also start to teach myself how to work by my calendar and not just in the chaos. For now, If you are going to schedule something to be completed, I want you to create a pile of to schedule items. I will be showing you tomorrow methods to schedule your tasks.

Continue to do this to your stack of paper. Depending how big a stack you have, this could take a few hours or even the rest of the day. After you have finished going through your stack of paper, move over to the rest of the papers and stuff on your desk and ask the very same questions above, the only difference will be if you find that the item is not actionable. If it is not actionable, then you should do one of three things:

1. Trash it > I know this is the hardest thing to do but really think about this. Are you really going to read that 2001 edition magazine. Ask yourself "Do I really need this?"

2. Add it to the Someday Maybe Pile > This pile is reserved for things like advertising offers you have received that you have not looked through but would like to.

3. Or add it to the Reference pile > This pile is different from the Someday Maybe Pile in that it is for items that you know you have to keep and will need at a future date. Things like permission slips, business papers, and contact files. In my case I used this pile for all my graphic magazines or postcards that I had received through the years. I was not going to use any of the services they offered but I really liked their design and would like to have it for reference at a later point. For this stuff, I bought some of those clear plastic file pouches at Office Max to store these random pieces in. The purpose of the Reference pile is for just that, anything that you NEED to have for reference. Do not just place junk in this pile to get it off your desk, if it does not need to be referenced or reviewed in the Someday Maybe Pile… It needs to go into the trash.

This Part of the organizational Process is going to take you most of the day to complete. Trust me, it is not something that happens quickly and it may not be the most fun but this is the most vital step in the organizational process. For the sake of not making this post any longer than what it already is, I will cover what you need to do with your organized piles tomorrow. I will show you how to create your filing system in a few different ways, I will show you what way I decided to go with and hopefully help you get to a place where you can see the top of your desk again.

So, work on this part for the rest of the day. Have fun in doing it by knowing you are one day closer to getting your life organized. Check back here tomorrow and we will go over the next few steps. If you have questions, be sure to leave me a comment and I will get back to you ASAP. See you tomorrow!

time to get organized - Part 1

24Jan07

by Brandon Gross

Well, January is almost over and that new years resolution you made to get organized is knocking on the door asking for you to pay up. Today, you don’t have to run from it anymore. I have some friends that have always struggled with getting their life and work organized. It seems this is a big need in many churches today but so many people just do not know where to start. The pile of stuff on, under, around, and in their desk is a bigger mountain than what they may feel they can climb. I believe most of the organizational woes come down to two things:

1. Not knowing where how or where to start
2. Lacking the time to get everything "fully" organized

Let’s face it… church work is not golf and relaxation. If you have worked in the church you know what I’m talking about here. It’s not always easy and it’s always 24/7 on call. The church worker/minister today pretty much falls into being a jack of all trades. Churches are in most cases understaffed, so it requires the present staff to be able to wear many different hats. Wearing many different hats sometimes makes it difficult to accomplish the task you were originally hired for… but getting organized will help tremendously to make you more efficient and less stressed.

The tools you need:

1. Buy the textbook. Go to your local bookstore or Amazon.com and buy "Getting Things Done" by David Allen. This will be your textbook for all things organization… we bought this book at Nspire and started putting Davids recommendations into practice. All I can say is it works and it feels good to have everything in its place of order.

2. Get your supplies. Go to your local office supply store and buy a few boxes of file folders, green hanging file folders, a hand-held labeler (I use a brother P-touch 11000QL) - the labeler is important; don’t try to get by writing on the file folders in pen or printing Avery labels. A labeler costs around $30.00 and it is worth every penny of it. Remember your files are not just for you, sometimes others need to be able to quickly find a file you have while you are not there and they shouldn’t have to be interpreting your handwriting… buy the labeler… you won’t regret it. Lastly if you do not have a file cabinet… get one of those too.

3. Give yourself some time. You are probably looking at your desk thinking, "this could take much more time than I have". My question would be how much are you losing now because you have not taken the time to organize everything… you will need about 2 to 3 days to really make this work.

4. Buy an inbox. You can get this at any office supply store. Take your pick, they probably have a ton to choose from that fall in all price ranges.

Tomorrow we will start into how to use all these tools to get you organized. So, in the mean time go buy the stuff you need and look over the book. Check back here at insidenspire tomorrow and I will show you how to put it all together.

creating a church website with an apple - Part 2 - iweb

19Jan07

by Brandon Gross


Yesterday, I gave a top ten list of why you should buy and apple if you are wanting to create a church website yourself. It might help if I give you some background as to why I decided to go on this "apple" tangent. Toward the beginning of the year, the youth pastor of the church community I go to came to me telling me how he had been researching the costs of creating a church website. He has some html knowledge but would be the first to say that he was no web programmer and he did not have the time to learn to be one.

His objective:

- I need it to be quick
- I need it to be easy
- I need it to look good
- and I need it to be cheap

It wasn’t like he wanted much… :) We went to lunch many times over the website issue and that is about the time I had just purchased my new Intel Core 2 Duo 120GB Hard Drive 2GB Ram Black Macbook….. complete with white apple stickers for my car… I had been looking at iweb and realized it was meeting many of the needs he wanted out of a website. It was easy to use, it was quick to get your website going, the templates looked good and could be modified and compared to the costs of custom web development… It was CHEAP. DING DING… I think we found a winner.

Why do I think iweb is a winner. Here is my list:

1. iweb is based on a "drag and drop" mentality. If you want a picture in a certain place you can drag a picture from your iphoto or another file and it appears where you put it. It works the same way with video… and it even embeds the player automatically. Not to mention it gives you free control to move the video anywhere you want it to be. If you have ever tried to put video into a website using HTML or another form… you know this is a nice, nice feature.

2. iweb is quick. When I said in my last post that you could have a website up in one day; I wasn’t kidding. All you do is add all the pages you want into iweb, put all your pictures, video’s, text, and other stuff in it, and then click on publish. Thats it. Done! You have two options to publish your site. For $99 you can purchase a .mac account and when you click publish… your site is active that minute… no joke! The other option is to publish to a folder and then you can use a ftp editor to move the folder to your own web host. This option is more for the do-it-yourselfer’s out there that want to use there own hosting.

3. iweb looks good. Do I really need to say much here… it’s mac software… everything looks good.

4. Iweb is cheap. Here is the one where most people would try to disagree with me. Yes a macbook or imac will run you close to $1,000. The imac is around $900. But here is what I told my friend… I asked him to give me an estimate of how much time he had spent trying to figure this website thing out. I then asked him to factor in the time it was going to take to learn the software he needed to learn in order to get a website like what he wanted (I’m not talking a cookie cutter website here). Lastly I asked him to factor in the cost of buying the service or software he needed then include the cost of the time I had him think about earlier. Needless to say, $1,000 dollars was cheap compared to what it would really cost to get a website the other way. I think I have him sold on it.

Hopefully this has given you some things to think about when deciding on your next church website. Questions??? Leave a comment and I will get back to you.

Create you next church website with an apple

18Jan07

by Brandon Gross


Ok, I don’t have any vicious (one of my youth has been using vicious instead of awesome… it’s been catchy) explanation for using a real "apple" for a website; unless you just want to take a picture of one. But I can tell you that the other "apple" will rock your world for creating a church website. Here is my list of "If you are" then use an apple to make you next church website:

If you:

1. Are still trying to figure what the acronym for HTML stands for… use an apple. (by the way it is Hyper Text Markup Language… no I’m not a web programmer… I used Google… and I use a mac:)

2. Have spent the last 7 days trying to find your keyboard under what you think is the top of your desk…. use an apple.

3. Quickly designed the bulletin one week for service and now the congregation thinks your spiritual gift is web design… use an apple.

4. Have found organization is not your friend… use an apple.

5. Think CSS is an old Navy submarine… use an apple.

6. Know the term "Drag and Drop" saved your life on a computer… use an apple.

7. Quickly realized Myspace was not the best choice for a church website… use an apple.

8. Are looking to score an instant 100 "cool points" with your church youth… use an apple.

9. Were quickly educated that custom made websites are not cheap… use an apple.

10. Have spent the last 9 questions trying to figure out what the joke means… use an apple.

Check back in tomorrow and I will show you how an apple can have you a "vicious" looking church website in less than one day… I’m serious… In the mean time I will leave you with some homework… Google iweb and then come back here tomorrow.

A new blog for your enjoyment

12Jan07

by Brandon Gross

I just ran across Craig Groschel and Bobby Gruenewald’s new blog; http://swerve.lifechurch.tv/ . Craig is the author of the free book I listed in a post a while back, Confessions of a Pastor. Both Craig and Bobby have posted some good reading material with some interesting stories. My favorite, so far, is pulling pants down… don’t think about it… just take a short break and read it here. Swerve looks like it is going to be a new blog hotspot before too long. Check it out.

creating a network for your church software

10Jan07

by Brandon Gross

I recently had a very interesting conversation with an IT consultant working on the board of a very large Church using Nspire.  He began to get complaints about problems with Nspire crashing and staff not being able to open Nspire this past summer. What he found was interesting and I am afraid typical for most churches. The Church is large around 5000 in attendance with over 100 staff and volunteers. When they purchased Nspire they thought they needed to put it on the fastest computer on the network to share. Their server was older and already struggling with Exchange. This computer happened to be their newest XP pro machine. Thinking they were good to go they began to share and use Nspire. It did not take too long before they were plagued by crashes, dropped connections, and very poor performance. All with no apparent reason. It took some time before they found the problem and it was XP Pro.

After some research they found this document from Microsoft, Inbound connections limit in Windows XP.(http://support.m icrosoft.com/kb/314882) It explained everything. This is a quote from the document..

For Windows XP Professional, the maximum number of other computers that are permitted to simultaneously connect over the network is ten. This limit includes all transports and resource sharing protocols combined. For Windows XP Home Edition, the maximum number of other computers that are permitted to simultaneously connect over the network is five.

This means that if your Church is using an XP Pro based server, you can have at the most 10 users simultaneously connected and if it is XP home based only 5. But wait there is more…if you are sharing a printer, other files, and Nspire depending on what resources you are using the number of users could be much less probably around 3-4 in this case. Because any shared resource counts, it will not take to long to run out of connections.

Nspire and other databases are very sensitive to this connection limit. Since Nspire requires a continuous connection to operate properly, any connection drop will cause it to close.

Check out whats going on at Nspire

03Jan07

by Brandon Gross

A lot of new things are on the way for 2007… Life with church software is about to be good… real good.

(Click on the image)





check this out

TXT Messaging is built right into our software!

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