Archive for the ‘ Learning ’ Category

Mobile How To: Stream Audio Shiurim on Your Smartphone

Many of us already recognize the tremendous value that can be found online in the form of audio (and even video) shiurim. These shiurim have rapidly taken the place of the Torah Tapes of our youth and continue to offer thirsty students of Torah the opportunity to enjoy a quality learning experience no matter where they find themselves, anywhere from Brooklyn to Barbados and everywhere in between.

Audio shiurim can be found in a number of places online, two of the best repositories of consistently updated shiurim can be found at YU Torah and OU Radio. These are the two site we will focus on for today’s Mobile How To.

As mentioned above, most of us are aware of the amazing value of online shiuirm, but there is an incredible feature that most of us are probably missing out on: Podcasting. Podcasting is basically just an RSS Feed consisting of MP3 files instead of articles, but the magic of Podcasting is revealed when its features are married with those of today’s always-connected smartphones; with their powers combined they allow the end-user to stream audio shiurim from just about anywhere, without having to download or check for updates. Once you find a class, topic of teacher you like you can use Podcasting just as you would TiVo (chas ve’shalom) to capture new classes automatically and view or listen at your convenience, and using your smartphone (we will focus on Android in this article) you can stream, not download and play, those shiurim from anywhere, whenever the mood strikes or you have a free block of time…think: on your daily commute, waiting in line, waiting for the bus, while at the mechanic…anywhere, anytime.

“How can I set up this magical TiVo for shiurim?” you ask? In about 3 steps and 5 minutes you will be up and running and listening to shiurim wherever and whenever.

Things you’ll need:

Step 1 – Set Up Google Listen:

Scan this QR Code to download Google Listen

Open the Android Market and search for Listen, visit http://listen.googlelabs.com or scan the QR Code to the right with your Android phone to download Google Listen.

Once you have downloaded and set-up Google Listen be sure that it is linked to your Google Account and proceed to Step 2.

Step 2 – Set Up Google Reader:

Open your browser on your computer and goto http://www.google.com/reader. When you set-up Google Listen and link it to your Google Account it will automatically create a new folder in Google Reader called “Listen Subscriptions”; this is where you will add the Podcasts you want to subscribe to.

Goto to your Reader settings page (by clicking the gear in the upper right-hand corner and clicking “Reader Settings”) and click over to the “Goodies” tab. Now, scroll to the bottom of this page and follow the instructions for adding the “Subscribe” bookmarklet to your browser.

Step 3a – Find Your Shiurim and RSS Feed:

YU Torah: Roll over the series of icons you want to subscribe to

For YU Torah: First, find the topic, speaker or series you want to subscribe to, next click-through to the actual shiur page and you will see a line of icons (RSS, Podcast, Apple logo, envelope), roll over them and click “Podcast”, next select the number of shiurim you want displayed at a time and click “Go”. A new window should now be open with the XML code of the RSS feed of your series of shiurim. Proceed to Step 3b.

 

 

OU Radio: Click the RSS icon to open the Subscription page

For OU Radio: Visit http://www.ouradio.org/podcasting, find the series you want to subscribe to, click the little RSS icon and proceed to Step 3b.
>Step 3b.

 

 

 

Step 3b – Subscribe and Enjoy!

Click "Feed Settings" to move your subscription to the "Listen Subscriptions" folder

All you need to do now is click on the bookmarklet you created in Step 2 and subscribe to this page. Once you are subscribed click “Feed Settings” and move the subscription to the “Listen Subscriptions” folder, now just fire up your Android phone, open the Listen app and you can stream all your subscribed shiurim, which will automatically update as new content is added!

 

 

 

 

 

Whether you use this tool for professional development, personal learning, to stay in touch with your students or to keep up to date on a class when you can’t be there, podcasting is an amazing tool that will help us all stay a little closer to Torah learning no matter where we find ourselves…happy streaming!

Online Gemura (Talmud) – Mobile Ready!

I was on the train to LA this morning playing around on my Blackberry, being bored. I was looking for something to tweet about on Twittorah (http://www.twitter.com/Twittorah) when I had a thought, but needed to find the source, I found my self looking for an english version of the Gemurah that I could access from my Blackberry, after some Googling and poking around, I found it!
Halakhah.com offers the full Soncino Talmud as both PDF (as seen before here) and as, get this, online mobile ready versions! I found myself reading through Ketubot this morning on the train, complete with footnote links and table of contents!
Suffice to say I was excited and continue to be as I can now easily access a full English Talmud from anywhere!

Check it out here: http://www.halakhah.com

Check it out: Frumhacks.blogspot.com
Get your bite-sized Torah: twitter.com/twittorah

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Excercise, Learn: Great Combo!

Stationary bicycleImage via Wikipedia

Just saw a great post on instructables about how to add a book holder to your stationary bicycle. I thought, ‘Wow, this is a great way to shteig and ride!’ But seriously, we all need to exercise and the walk to and from the beis doesn’t always cut it, so get your chol ha’moed going with a project that will get your blood flowing and brain moving.
See the link below for full instructions on how to add a shtender to your stationary bike!

http://www.instructables.com/id/Bike_handlebar_mounted_hands_free_book_holder/

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Jewish Content For The PDA (Blackberry, iPhone, etc.)

Guest Post from DJ EverAfter:

Thanks to the blogmaster for letting me guest post. Shout out to fellow frumhackers with smart phones. You’re paying out the nose for this fancy shmancy gadget and who knows what for your data plan, so you might as well be able to at least replace a couple books with it, right?

The Internet is replete with Jewish content for smart phones (BlackBerrys, Palms, Treos, iPhones, etc), but today I want to plug my favorite: http://www.jewishcontent.org/. Jewish Content doesn’t just have the full siddur (shacharit, mincha, maariv, and rosh chodesh) in four different nuschaot (Ashkenazi, Edut HaMizrach, Sfard, and Ari), it also features some serious Torah, including, but not limited to, all of Tanach (including Chumash with the Targum for Shnayim Mikre, as well as several mefarshim in full), all of the Mishnah and Talmud Bavli, Rambam’s Mishnah Torah, and all four turim of Shulchan Aruch. For the more Lubavitch-inclined, they feature the Tanya, Hayom Yom, Likutei Sichos, and Toras Menachem. There are some pretty nutty things up there; while writing this I realized they have the entire Sefer HaChinuch! And all, of course, for free.

Speaking for BlackBerry users, installation is simple; the instructions are delineated on the site and can be done via computer or OTA. I must say I am not a fan of the font they picked, and while the navigation is easy to master, it falls short of the type of sophistication the rest of your device features. But that hardly detracts from the sheer volume of texts and general ease of use.

Two thumbs way up from this user!

http://www.jewishcontent.org/

Direct link to PDA site: http://www.jewishcontent.org/pda/

How To Beat Your Chevrusa

We’ve all been there…sitting in the beis, apartment, or shul, book open, pens twirling, minds racing, tensions are high and the argument is about to erupt. “The Rashba DOES NOT SAY THAT!” You shout. “OF COURSE HE DOES!” Retorts your equally quick witted opponent. And then from there the ‘leshem shamayim’ argument spirals out of control. Both of you are surely right and at the same time both surely wrong. I am not one to advocate conflict resolution tactics in a case like this, truly there should be a winner. But what I will offer (courtesy of Stepcase Lifehack) is suggestions on how to WIN. Because let’s be honest, that’s what matters. (By the way you’re both wrong, the Rashba doesn’t say what either of you think, you mistranslated a word one page back, four lines from the bottom. It changes everything.)

In the DO department Sloane suggests a few things that may seem like old news to many of us (who have been arguing since the womb) but a refresher course, as the Mesilat Yesharim tells us, is always in order. He reminds us to stay calm, “If you lose your temper,” he says, “you lose.” Ask Questions, something we all know about, Know Your Opponent, and Try for a Win-Win. All great pieces of advice when dealing with conflict in general.

In the DON’Ts he gives us great points to remember such as Don’t get personal.

And of course my favorite section: The Sneaky Way. Sloane makes some not so sneaky suggestions, that any Yeshiva Bachur should already have in his repertoire, namely Exaggerate your opponent’s point and Contradict Confidently. Exaggeration is a key point in the chevrusa battle, taking a theory to it’s logical extreme and testing it’s stability is one of the best ways to prove a point. And of course nothing is more important than being confident, ‘if you are not for yourself, then who will be for you?’

Here is a quote:

There is not much point in having brilliant ideas if we cannot persuade people of their value. Persuasive debaters can win arguments using the force of their reason and by the skillful deployment of many handy techniques. Here are some general dos and don’ts to help you win arguments together with some sneaky tactics to be aware of.

Check out the full article here and brush up on your chevrusa battle tactics.

Search Seforim (Jewish Texts) Right From Firefox! or |DBS For The Rest of Us|

How great are those database software programs? They are immensely helpful in allowing those of us who learn and use a computer to have a better grasp of texts and find those hard to find things buried in a Rambam, Shulchan Aruch or Tanach. They allow us to find themes, and examine theories, all in all, one of the biggest things to hit Torah learning since, well, actually learning Torah. They are our tool in the fight against yeridas ha’doros, Rashi may have known everything by heart, but at least now we can level the playing field a little by being able to search through everything with a computer as he would have done in his brain. [I mean no disrespect to any gedolim/rabbanim/rishonim, just a little literary license to make a point in jest, don't need the new blog in cherem:)]

But at the same time, how many of us have the few thousand shekel or dollars to drop on all these great software programs? Not me, that’s for sure. Instead I either email/call friends who have them or have access to them, schlep out to a Yeshiva, or University (or a combination thereof) and use theirs, or (the most common) spend time online trying to find texts and using the rudimentary search features I can hack together (see “Let’s just get this out of the way…” for more on sites with texts). Until Now…

Sifrei Kodesh Search is a Firefox add-on that allows you to search through seforim (Jewish Texts) right from your browser! It currently searched through:

  • Tanach (Tanakh or תנ”ך)
  • Mishna
  • Tosefta
  • Talmud Bavli
  • Talmud Yerushalmi
  • Mishna Torah (Rambam)

It uses the power of Google Custom Search and is really great!

SKS has a virtual keyboard to allow you type in Hebrew, allows you to nail down a search by section, book, chapter, verse, etc. and is still in development so that means that there will be more great updates yet to come.

Here is a quote from the description on the SKS homepage:

Combining the power of Firefox, Google and the Mechon Mamre text library, this extension allows you to search the Hebrew texts of Tana”ch, Mishna, Talmud Bavli, Talmud Yerushalmi, Tosefta and Mishna Torah. You can search as broadly as all of these sources or as specifically as a single book of Tana”ch, a single tractate of Mishna or a single set of Halachot of the Mishnah Torah. The extension includes an onscreen Hebrew keyboard to assist those who do not know the Hebrew keyboard layout and/or do not have Hebrew input support on their computers. (You can use this keyboard to copy and paste Hebrew text into other things also.)

Click here for the SKS Homepage.
Click here for the Firefox add-on page for SKS.
Click here to download the add-on.

Levenger Page Points® Bookmarkers

Since my days in Yeshiva I have always found the ‘ShtarkMark‘ to be useful tool while learning, reading and researching, however on shabbos, it seems, it may be assur to use them. (although there have been opinions that are matir in various situations, such as a second sticking when attaching to a surface that is not the same material as the mark) But have no fear! Levenger Page Points® Bookmarkers are the perfect shabbos solution to the ShtarkMark issue, not to mention they look a whole lot classier, are better for the environment and are reusable.

The cost $10 for a tin of three dozen and can be purchased at Levenger’s site. Here is a description from the site:

Mark the passage in a book and leave no mark

Our paper-thin Page Points® mark book pages in the most inconspicuous manner, and their finish is kind to paper. You can move these bookmarks as often as you want or leave them in books permanently, as they won’t harm pages. Get more from your book, without leaving a trace.

  • Each point measures just 1″W x ½”H
  • Three dozen come in a tin

“My work requires using various references on a regular basis. These page points are wonderful for marking the frequently used sections for ease of finding. I used to use sticky notes, but they became ragged and were unsightly sticking out of the edges of the books. This is a much improved system.”

- Rae New Orleans, LA

I’ll be honest, I have been using them since high-school and love them, but only recently made the connection to solve this serious issue in Hilchos Shabbos and Kavod for Seforim.

Let’s just get all this stuff out of the way…

Unless you have been living under a rock for the past few years, (and there are many of you who have been) you have probably already heard of the sites I am going to discuss below. However I felt it necessary to list and profile them on the blog because they fit so well, and I am sure there are those of you out there who have not heard of one or all of them.

That being said this is probably a good time to bring up a point about reading this blog: there will probably some posts for things you already know about, or have already done, this doesn’t mean you should just give up reading and move on, the blog is aimed at the middle of the group so for some of you that means that there will often times be posts that you have heard of, and for others everything here will be new and exciting. Please try and refrain from posting comments like, “DUH! Where have you been??!?” and the like, not only does it make other reader who may have not heard of these things feel bad, but it makes you look insensitive and, well, boorish.

Onward!

OnlySimchas.com
Provides free posting of simchas (everything from Weddings, to Upsherins (sp?) to Aliyah) complete with a personal photo gallery of your simcha, message posting (to wish a ‘Mazel Tov’) and video uploads to help keep those Jewish yentahs informed at all times. It has become a staple of frum life. “Yeah, she’s engaged, I just saw it on OnlySimchas!” or “Mazel Tov! Are there pictures on OnlySimchas?” OnlySimchas has added classified ads, business directories and a dating service.

MyZmanim.com
Possibly on of the most important sites for frum life. Provides zmanim (Halachic times) for every place on the planet, just by entering your location, zip code, or even latitude and longitude. The site has the ability to adjust for many different shitos, for example sea level vs. actual altitude and has recently added davening directions to help us all face the right way while praying.

GoDaven.com and MinyanMaps.com
International minyan databases, let you find a minyan anywhere there is one. GoDaven uses a search engine and MinyanMaps uses a map feature similar to Google Maps.

FiveTownsRadio.com
An online radio stations that streams Jewish music and content to your computer 24/6.

MostlyMusic.com
Possibly the greatest Jewish media site ever. MostlyMusic sells Jewish music CDs, sheet music, tapes, etc. all on their surprisingly professional site. When I first visited I thought it was a regular site that happened to carry Jewish stuff. They also now have their own Jewish online radio station, JewishBroadcast.com.

HebCal.com
Great tool! HebCal generates Jewish calendars for any day, month, year complete with holidays, dates, candle lighting times, sedras days of the omer and more. It also converts Gregorian dates to Jewish ones, lists the Holidays or your personal days (Yahrtzeits, etc.) and has parsha summaries for the weekly parsha. If you visit it from your mobile phone it will ask for your zip code and give you the shabbos times.

A list of websites that have seforim online:

And I am sure there are many more…

And now for some shameless plugs for friends’ sites:

WearMOTS.com
My friend Hillel Smith makes T-shirts and the truth is they are pretty good. He spent a really long time in college learning how to do it (and all sorts of other things to do with art) even though he probably didn’t need to…
[From the About Us of the site] “So everyone you know, you included, has at some point thought, “Hey, I’m funny. And Jewish. I’ll make t-shirts.” We went through with it. As M.o.T.s (Members of the Tribe, i.e. Jews. That includes you.) we wanted something that’s Jewish, funny, smart, and pretty darn cool. Founded in late 2006, M.o.T.s is headquartered in Los Angeles (home of the short sleeves in winter) and trying to establish branch offices elsewhere. Let us know if you’re interested. Enjoy our M.o.T.s. They are yafeh me’od.”

ShtarkProductions.com
The maker of the original ‘Shtark Card’ a credit card sized card with everything from Brachot to Pitom Ha’Ketoret and everything in between. They are full color, pretty (I wonder who designed them?) and laminated so you don’t have to worry about going into the bathroom when they are in your pocket. They are now expanding into Gedolim/Rebbe pictures and a number of other neat innovations for frum life. Their full site should be up soon (I wonder who is supposed to be developing it?). But visit their temporary page to place an order or make a customized card for your simcha, youth group or other event.

Kol Hamevaser
YU magazine focusing on Jewish thought, a great read and always entertaining, thought provoking and frustrating.
[From the site] “Kol Hamevaser is a magazine of Jewish thought dedicated to sparking the discussion of Jewish issues on the Yeshiva University campus. It will serve as a forum for the introduction and development of new ideas. Additionally, Kol Hamevaser will provide an outlet for the varieties of original thought already existing on campus. The print edition of the magazine will also serve as the centerpiece for the further growth of an exciting community of young scholars and thinkers as they mature and prepare to tackle the issues facing the larger Orthodox and Jewish worlds.”

I hope these links are helpful and now with all of these ‘old things’ out of the way, I hope to begin with some innovations…