Blue Line for Psion Series 5 and Revo
- What it runs on
- Psion Series 5, Series 7, and Revo. (Author has tested on Psion 5mx and
Revo+, and on a Series 7 emulator.)
- What it does
- Blue Line can be used to view the line for any method and "ring" it from
the keyboard. It can extract methods from the regularly updated place notation
available free of charge from the web at:
http://www.ringsoft.co.uk/change-ringers/ringing-programs/microsiril/method-libraries/mslibs.zip.
Thus a ringer can have any line he/she would ever be asked to ring available
at a moment's notice in his/her pocket.
Random touches, including spliced, can be "rung" on the keyboard to test one's
knowledge of the method(s) prior to grabbing hold of a rope. Touches of spliced
can be entered and practiced, such as a peal of 23-spliced. This is particularly
useful when wanting to test yourself on each lead at least once, by entering an
"all the work" composition of your own choice (or creation) from
http://www.bronze-age.com/elf/ .
Comes complete with comprehensive help.
- What it costs
- FREE, but a donation to the St. Mary's Cheltenham
http://www.abbey1.org.uk/parish/
Bell Fund for an amount that you believe appropriate, will incline the author
to send you any updates by email.
- Where to get it and/or more information
-
http://www.abbey1.org.uk/blue_line/
Blue Line for Psion |
iAgrams for iPhone etc |
JBlueLine for Android |
JBlueLineME |
Mobel for iPhone etc |
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iAgrams (blue line app for iPhone and iPod Touch)
- What it runs on
- Apple iPhone and iPod Touch running iOS 4 or newer. Will also run on the
iPad, as an iPhone app.
- What it does
- iAgrams can display the line, grid or changes of any method in the Central
Council method libraries - that is to say, any of the 17,000 or so named
methods. It contains all of the information in the Central Council method
libraries, including falseness groups and dates of first peals. It is,
however, not a ringing simulator, and does not produce sound or allow
methods to be rung. iAgrams is organised around the idea of a method
collection, which is simply a group of methods that you want to think of
together. There are pre-defined collections, such as the Standard 8 Surprise
Major, and you can define your own. Accessing a method collection is quick
and easy, and avoids the need to repeatedly search for a method in the
complete libraries. It is also easy to step through the methods in a
collection, which is useful if you are learning or revising several methods
at once.
- What it costs
- Free
- Where to get it and/or more information
- Download it from the Apple App Store.
- More information at www.iAgrams.co.uk
Blue Line for Psion |
iAgrams for iPhone etc |
JBlueLine for Android |
JBlueLineME |
Mobel for iPhone etc |
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JBlueLineAE (method learning program for Android Smartphones)
- What it runs on
- Android (Ver 1.5+)
try before you
buy.
- What it does
- Allows you to view and 'ring' methods in the simulator. Aiming for
testing method recall from memory at speed, not ringing in time to anyone
else. It uses the microSIRIL method libraries in order to make over 16,000
methods available to you to browse and ring. You can choose to ring plain
courses, random leads and random touches, all while waiting at the church
for your fellow ringers to arrive.
- Library used
- microSIRIL method libraries.
- What it costs
- £12 -
proceeds to bell restoration
- Where to get it and/or more information
- JBlueLineAE can be downloaded from
http://www.stmarkschelt.co.uk/JBlueLine/.
Full help on using the application is available on-line there too. If you
would like to see what the software is like before downloading, then please
use the free on-line version available at
http://www.cheltenhambranch.org.uk/jblueline.php#usage
Blue Line for Psion |
iAgrams for iPhone etc |
JBlueLine for Android |
JBlueLineME |
Mobel for iPhone etc |
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JBlueLineME (method learning program for mobile phones and PDAs)
- What it runs on
- Any mobile device with a Java runtime environment. Specifically,
mobile phones and PDAs (Palm, WinCE, Symbian) as long as they have support
for J2ME, CLDC-1.1 and MIDP 2.0. If your phone was purchased recently and
plays games it can probably run JBlueLineME -
try before you buy.
- What it does
- Allows you to view and 'ring' methods in the simulator. Aiming for
testing method recall from memory at speed, not ringing in time to anyone
else. It uses the microSIRIL method libraries in order to make over 15,000
methods available to you to browse and ring. You can choose to ring plain
courses, random leads and random touches, all while waiting at the church
for your fellow ringers to arrive.
- Library used
- microSIRIL method libraries.
- What it costs
- £12 - proceeds to bell restoration
- Where to get it and/or more information
- JBlueLineME can be downloaded from
http://www.stmarkschelt.co.uk/JBlueLine/. Full help on using the application is available
on-line there too. If you would like to see what the software is like before
downloading, then please use the free on-line version available at
http://www.cheltenhambranch.org.uk/jblueline.php#usage
Blue Line for Psion |
iAgrams for iPhone etc |
JBlueLine for Android |
JBlueLineME |
Mobel for iPhone etc |
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Mobel ringing simulator for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad
- What it runs on
- Apple iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad running iOS 3 or iOS 4
- What it does
- Mobel lets you practise any method on 4 to 16 bells, ringing a single
bell or, for handbell ringers, a pair: just tap the screen to ring your
bell(s). You can ring plain courses, or touches with bobs and/or singles
that Mobel calls, or spliced. You can conduct touches of single methods.
You can select from over 17,000 methods, and can edit methods to create new
ones, including Doubles Variations. You can vary the speed of the ringing,
and ring with handstoke gap or cartwheeling. You can have Mobel wait for you
if you hesitate while ringing - or it can carry on in perfect rhythm.
Mobel can display the blue line diagram for any method, showing all the rows,
or just the lines, or a grid. Mobel shows the diagram for bobs and singles,
if these are defined for the method. You use pinch gestures to zoom the
display, and swipe left and right if the picture is too big for the screen.
For Handbells, Mobel displays the lines for both the bells you'd ring.
- What it costs
- £5.99 ($9.99 USA). All profits go to charities, including bell
restoration funds.
- Where to get it and/or more information
- Buy it from the Apple App Store. More information there, and at
www.abelsim.co.uk
Blue Line for Psion |
iAgrams for iPhone etc |
JBlueLine for Android |
JBlueLineME |
Mobel for iPhone etc |
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