Demolition Day has arrived for the humble annex. Turns out you can use a backhoe to bring down a building.
Uncategorized
Vista when?
The IT organizations of Intel and Dell are waiting for SP1 to upgrade to Vista. I know we’ll run Vista eventually, but I also know it won’t be in 2007. We’ll look closely at it in November when we need to decide whether to budget for it in 2008. If it doesn’t seem like a good move, we’ll wait and look at it again in November 2008.
What are your Vista roll-out plans?
KC lunch meeting?
I’d like to get together for lunch with my KC-area church IT homies sometime in the next couple of weeks. How about the 10th, 17th, or 31st? Leave a comment …
Silverlight?
Who out there is paying attention to Microsoft’s Silverlight technology announcements? Is it as big a deal as Scoble suggests?
Church IT Blogroll
Today I realized I had never posted a roll of the church IT blogs I read. So I went through and cleaned up the subscription list in my feed reader (IE 7), exported the list as OPML, and then imported it into blogrolling.com in order to quickly create the new blogroll you see on the right.
Then I realized, this could be a really cool way to link church IT blogs, using the same approach as the Methodist Blogroll. So, here goes …
Church IT Blogroll Instructions
Benefits:
- We will maintain the blogroll and update it regularly
- As links are added, updated, and deleted, it will update on your blog automatically
- A great way to keep track of the church IT blogging world and build the fledgling Church IT Roundtable/Church IT Association
Requirements:
- Your blog is focused on church IT and/or church web sites
- You update it regularly (if we see no posts for a few months, we’ll take you off)
- You provide an RSS feed of your posts (because the feed is what we’ll actually put on the blogroll)
To get on the blogroll:
- E-mail me (clif.guy at cor.org)
- We’ll check out your blog and add you if you meet the requirements
To add the blogroll to your own site, paste the following code in your blog template:
<script language=”javascript” type=”text/javascript” src=”http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display.php
?r=9407d5ed585629e658efc2318e1add48″></script>
FBI update
In my wee-hours haze last night I linked something totally unrelated to Andrew’s video. It’s here.
The FBI pays us a visit
The Annex is going away. It’s worth less than it would cost to move, so what to do? I know! Blow it up, real good! Our Facilities folks invited the local FBI SWAT team to use it for practicing a hostage situation. Andrew took a bit of video showing the guys in full battle gear assaulting the Annex. And here are some pictures of the damage they left in their wake.
Annex main entrance with shattered glass everywhere:
Glass from the back door lays shattered on the floor:

A spent shotgun shell (they used shotguns to shoot open locked doors):

Smashed door hinge:

This door latch was blown off by a shotgun blast. It threw the door knob into the sheetrock wall, making a nice hole:

The black spot on the floor is from a “flashbang” – a non-lethal grenade that makes a big flash and a loud bang to stun anyone in the vicinity. You can see damage on the adjacent partition. The white powder on the floor is fire extinguisher residue:
The Leawood Police are coming in tomorrow for more training exercises. There’s nothing left to smash. 😉
Seth’s “Memo to the very small”
Those of you who subscribe to Seth Godin’s blog have already seen his post a week ago titled “Memo to the very small.” Interesting that he mentioned churches in the opening paragraph as possible users of his method for small organizations to use the web.
People from small or technically-unsophisticated churches frequently ask us for advice about how to build or rebuild their church web site. Seth describes these people perfectly when he says:
These are businesses that have trouble dealing with the Yellow Pages. Too much trouble, too much time, way too expensive. So, should local micro-businesses just ignore the web? Or should they become experts in the art of building and maintaining a website?
His suggestion is to use Typepad with a standard template, a Squidoo lens, and a set of pictures on Flickr. Those of you who work with small churches as a volunteer or consultant, does this sound like a good recommendation?
Neat Patch?
We don’t need no stinking Neat Patch. (Sorry, Jason, couldn’t resist.)
This is one of the racks for our new office at Southcreek. It has two 48-port HP switches and fewer than 10 ports are free since we completed our moves yesterday.
On the shelf below the patch panel is our SonicWall firewall and DSL modem. These provide a backup (a VERY slow backup) for our wireless LAN bridge.
Moving Day 2
Yesterday was the last big moving day in a sequence of moves we’ve been doing for more than a week.
Below is the humble Annex, a temporary building obtained for our rapidly-expanding Children’s Ministry back in the mid 1990s. For the last several years it has been the central church office, housing our receptionists, mail room, main copy/work room, most of our executive management, and numerous other staff. It’s hot in the summer, cold in the winter, and frequently smells of animals that have crawled underneath to die! Next week it will be used by local law enforcement for training exercises before it is finally dismantled and hauled off.








