The Best Spaceships in the Galaxy

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IGN.com created a list of the top 10 space ships, based on “pop-culture impact and all around cool means of transpo.” It’s a pretty good list, although I have one gripe: no X-Wing? Come on. That is the top fighter craft in SciFi ever. I would kick that video game space ship out of number 7 and put the X-Wing in there. Why would a video game space ship be in here anyway? Give them their own list. Also, if I really thought about it, I would probably find something to replace number 10, even though that is a cool space ship.

Another thing I have to disagree with: “can’t explain what people were thinking when they came up with TNG‘s D” (in reference to the Enterprise-D of Start Trek: The Next Generation). Whatever! That was the coolest Enterprise ever, even though it is a little dated now.

The coolest thing: Serenity makes the list….

Turns Out ‘Snail Mail’ is Good Descriptor

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I read a story today about a man in Poland that was not happy with the mail service there.  It took him three weeks to get a priority mail letter that was sent to him.  So, he did the calculations and found out that a snail really could have beat his letter.  It literally could have traveled the distance quicker than three weeks.  sad but true.

Blogs or Discussion Boards in Online Classes?

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I was interviewed recently by Magna Publications about the differences between using Blogs and Discussion Boards in Online classes. In the next month or so, I will also be developing this idea into a full article. I will let you know when that is published. Until then, the interview on this issue contains the basic thoughts and can be read here:

Focus on Faculty: Blogs or Discussion Boards?

More on the Digital Piracy Controversy

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I’ve been writing other places about all of the controversy surrounding digital file sharing.
For the record, I don’t think that it is right to steal music or movies or anything else in the long run online. I do think that it should be legal to be able to sample or preview something before you buy it, even though in most cases this is lumped in with piracy, so it still has to be avoided. I also think we need to deal with things like out of print titles in the debate. Like, re-issue them or release them for free online and stop complaining about it. But, I’ll just link to my other posts on these issues.:

EduGeek Journal post on “The Great Copy Protection Debate”

This post comments on an ongoing debate on the New York Times website about copy protection. It’s an interesting read on two sides of the issue. I became really fed up with the way on side was presenting their take, so I commented on the issue with some more thoughts. My comment is number 3 (posted at 2:27 pm on January 16, 2008) at the bottom of this page:

Bits Debate: Mixing It Up Over Remixes and Fair Use

Working in the Cold

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It’s the coldest day of the year, so I knew what to expect coming in to work today: the window washers for the seven story building nest to where I work would be out cleaning the windows today.  It never fails that they are always up there on the most frozen day of the year.  Now, they either have the cruelest boss in the world, or the world’s most unlucky schedule maker.  Either way, I look at them and think back to the worst jobs I have ever had, and think “at least I was never sitting on a plank of wood 5 stories up working with water on a near freezing temperature day.”

Of course, I am now sitting in my office with the A/C blowing on my, a huge sweater and my coat on to stay warm.  But I get to sit here and do blogs like this.  So, I’ll put up with the temperature.

Especially since I get to work on some fun things.  I am finishing up a rough draft on a chapter in a Web2.0 in Education book.  My chapter looks at Web3.0 and the future of online education.  It’s really fun, and I hope it passes the next round of approvals.  If not, I am presenting on this same subject at a conference in June, so I can at least use this content there.  I also need to get to work on an article about choosing between a blog or a discussion board in online classes.  Should be fun to write, also.

The Hypocrisy Problem in Church Today

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Lifeway released some interesting survey results recently. They basically surveyed specific attitudes of people that don’t go to church. This was the stat that caught my attention:

  • 72% of the people surveyed said that they thought the church was full of hypocrites.

Well…. I never. While something like this can seem like an insult, I do have to admit that these people are correct. Churches are full of hypocrites. Before you think you can predict the rest of my thoughts here and think that I am going to decry the amount of hypocrisy in church today, I want to explore a slightly different path here.

What is hypocrisy, anyway? We throw it around a lot – but what does it mean to be a hypocrite? You can basically look at hypocrisy as a lie – you say one thing and do another. This ties in with something else I read today: a study that claims that the average person tells almost 88,000 lies in their life time (3-5 times per day). So, the sad fact is – we are all hypocrites. Churches are full of hypocrites because the world is full of hypocrites.

The real rub here is that one of the functions of a church is to reveal hypocrisy. And this is actually a good thing. Sure – you go to church to worship and pray. But you should also go to get your life examined from an outside perspective, so that your hypocrisy is exposed and you can actually change it. Not to have fingers pointed at you or to get judged, but to actually help you become a better person.

So what this all means is that people who don’t go to church don’t want to come, in part, because they see the hypocrisy in other people’s lives that has already been exposed.

Great. So…. what can you do about the fact that people don’t want to come to church because the church is doing one of the things that the church is supposed to do? Beats me. It’s this big lie that we all believe in America that hypocrisy is worse than any other mistake you can make, and that being a hypocrite means that what you believe in is wrong because of your hypocrisy and not because of any actual truth behind it. Or that you should avoid someone because they don’t actually do what they say they believe. If this were true, I guess we would all have to lock ourselves in our houses, get online jobs, and never interact with other human beings.

But such is the mindset that we have to work with in modern America. How to convince people that they actually need the very thing that is turning them off right now. Luckily, that’s not the real issue here. But it’s one that I’m sure will cause many discouraging conversations around the nation on a daily basis. Most churches will probably work to find a way to be less hypocritical. That’s always a good goal, but one we will have to work on for the rest of our lives. And probably not the quickest way to convince people to visit your church.

Come to think of it, realizing the truth about global hypocrisy, it kind of puts an interesting spin on all the churches that are trying to reach people by just “being real”? In “being real,” wouldn’t that mean they would be letting their hypocrisy hang out in the wind for everyone to see? Wouldn’t that mean that they are actually pushing more people away – since so many people don’t like the realness of hypocrisy? Just some things to ponder on, I guess.

Nothing New Under the Son

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I’ve been working on this post for a while. I want to make this point without hacking anyone off. I know many people, many good friends (who luckily don’t ever read any blogs) that do exactly what I am going to recommend not doing. But, I think this still warrants saying, so please realize that this is my two cents and you are free to disagree if you want.

Katie and I have been going through some transitions recently. Our former church home was just too far away. We were able to find a great church nearer to us that shares the same vision and goals as our former church, so we made the eventual transition to this church. We visited several churches (including a scary large prosperity Gospel mega-McChurch that I’ve blogged about before) before settling on our current church.

Sometimes I get to talking to people about why we didn’t choose another newer church near us that has some great ideas and does some new, different things. It is a great church that I would be glad to go to. We go where we felt called. But here is my main issue with so many new churches: they try really hard to not be like existing churches. For me, I just can’t get fully behind a church that is trying to not be like others. I believe that a church should just be what they are called to be, and that’s it. Don’t worry if you do or don’t look like someone else and just go for it with all of your heart.

I believe that we need new churches. We need new styles of churches to reach different people. We need churches to stay at manageable sizes so that everyone gets plugged in and covered. I’m all for that. I just feel that new churches need to watch their attitudes about existing churches.

I’ve seen many churches through the years try to be current and modern by avoiding “churchy” stuff. Slogans, structures, dress codes, songs, and anything else that smacks of traditional churchiness are all thrown out in favor of reaching people around them.

Then, some kind of problem happens. You see this historically with every new church ever started. Some just fall apart when this happens. But most come up with some ideas of how to deal with problems, and implement these ideas. Once these ideas are implemented, the new church usually ends up looking just like some other established church somewhere else. Sure, they may look different than the church that they originally came from, but they still really haven’t created anything new.

And, hence my thought for the day – there really isn’t anything new under the sun. It seems like for every church that tried something new, I eventually find someone else that was doing it before them. Things change, but most new stuff is really just a new combination of existing older stuff. And, like I said – I am all for that. I love that kind of stuff. As long as you are doing that because it is what you are led to do, not just because you are trying to not be something else.

Take for example, Vineyard churches. No one will deny that they really pushed “modern” worship into it’s current level of popularity. But, if you look around hard enough, you will find churches that were doing “modern” style worship before Vineyard (or the churches that became Vineyard even) was even an idea. And the first churches that because Vineyard were not even aware of these other churches.

Or another practical example I have seen: some Baptist members get tired of not being able to raise hands in their church, or maybe the fact that they don’t reach people of other cultures, or whatever. So, with the blessing of their pastor, they start a new church to explore these things and reach the culture around them. They do some things that are great and ground breaking (to them), but then some problems arise. They come up with something that solves these problems, and a few years after they have started, they end up working just like a Vineyard church.

Not that they is bad. It’s just what I have noticed, and an example to make my point: follow God by actively doing what he calls you to, not by avoiding becoming someone else.

A Bad Sign to Start the Day

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I swipe my card at work, and the card reader says “access denied.”  Is this their way of telling me that I am fired?  After 3 swipes, no access.  Someone did let me in, and my office is still here.  Chaney said something about server problems.  I hope that isn’t the new way that kids these days are saying you’ve been canned.  Guess I am being paranoid.  But why is Harriet keep telling me she has dibs on my computer speakers?