Pete Whiting, in a guest post on Joel Dehlin’s blog, has some insights into the perils of complexity. This is good food for thought as we plan our server virtualization project at Resurrection, which we have scheduled for implementation in May. I particularly agree with Pete’s point about isolating/avoiding tight coupling between services. For example, it’s much better if an application is dependent only on one server, than if it requires two (or more) servers to be able to operate. With virtualization, we are making it a priority to gather everything a particular application needs onto a single virtual server, which will be able to run on either of two redundant physical servers. This architecture provides the benefits of redundancy without introducing unnecessary interdependence.
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A Long Overdue Thank-You
Thanks Tony for your outstanding hospitality during my visit to Perimeter Church back in December with Mark Stephenson. Please offer my long overdue thanks to the rest of your team as well. Our tour of Perimeter Church’s facilities was amazing. God has blessed the church with an innovative spirit that is never satisfied with past accomplishments. The oldest part of the building is only 15 years old, but already many parts have been purposed and repurposed, designed and redesigned, modeled and remodeled numerous times as the church’s needs have grown and changed. That kind of passionate pursuit of ministry warms my heart and re-energizes me.
Speaking of open source
Scoble posted today about the Viacom-Google lawsuit. He says Viacom loses by winning. YouTube, which is owned by Google, wins by losing. It will be a few years before we know, but I hope he’s right.
Open Source Kingdom
Mark Batterson posted recently about the kingdom impact of freely sharing creative ideas. Here’s hoping Mark’s vision spreads to decision-makers in other congregations. The Church should be the greatest open source community in the world.
The DST Saga Continues (with a happy ending, we think?)
Tony has been blogging about various Daylight Savings Time issues at Perimeter Church here, here, and here. We, too, have had some serious headaches with this. I commented on one of Tony’s posts saying that we couldn’t get the Exchange Calendar Update tool to work. Tony generously put the question out to IT Discuss and we got a response from Jason Hand of Walk Through the Bible. Thanks Jason, but unfortunately it didn’t help.
So … Yesterday, when everything was going horribly wrong 😉 Ian, our network administrator, found someone at Microsoft who could help us. He posted a full explanation of what happend here. Turns out even the developer at Microsoft who wrote the tool couldn’t get it to work in our case. In the end he threw up his hands and had Ian do a manual workaround to the front-end of the process that allowed the rest of it to run successfully.
Things have finally settled down here. We have only a few, minor issues being reported today. DST – was it fun for you?
Fall IT Roundtable Invitation
Accordingly, we would like to invite you to come to Kansas City for the Fall Roundtable October 3-4, which is right before Leadership Institute, our biggest conference of the year. After the Roundtable you could stay for Leadership Institute if you’re so inclined. I spoke with Tony Dye about getting this on the agenda for discussion at the Spring Roundtable to determine the level of interest. To get the conversation started, please leave a comment here and let me know if this sounds good.
National Church IT Association?
Fall Roundtable Format
What if we made a first effort at this idea for the Fall Roundtable? What if we limit attendance here in Kansas City to 15-20 people and find some great way to link in roundtable groups from other cities? This idea is partially inspired by the Willow Creek Leadership Summit that brings together church leaders from around the world. We’re imagining some kind of “un-conference” that retains the strengths of peer-to-peer sharing but is scalable to involve many more people than you can fit around one table. We would like for everyone to be able to see/hear each other and use their own laptops to annotate/live blog the discussion and have side conversations. We’re not even close to figuring out how to do this from either a facilitation or technical standpoint, but one idea is to use Adobe Connect (formerly Macromedia Breeze). Whatever the mechanism is, we would need to fully test both the technology and the method of facilitation prior to the meeting. And, no doubt, we’d learn a great deal from doing this once. At that point we would know either a) this works; b) this works but needs to be tweaked/improved; or c) it doesn’t/can’t work.
Please comment and let me know your thoughts or post on your own blog and link back to this post.
Don’t you be doing that church hop
Perry Noble points us to Steven Furtick blasting church hoppers/church shoppers like I’ve never seen it done before. I was fired up by his comments. On the other hand, I have good friends who have struggled with finding the right place where God is calling them to worship, grow, and serve. There’s a line between a genuine spiritual struggle and a crassly consumerist attitude toward church.
The best approach for churches is to reach out and welcome everyone with all of their experiences, sins, mistakes, bad hair, doubts, fears, body odor, struggles, biases, broken relationships, addictions, questions, emotions, mental illness, inappropriate behavior … and yes, even warped attitudes towards church. We start with people wherever they are. And then, pay close attention here, we must rely on the power of the Holy Spirit to work through our teaching, worship, service, and deep Christian community to transform them. No doubt some of those people have been church goers for years, yet they haven’t learned even the basics of Christian discipleship. Instead of giving up and calling them out, let’s call them up to a richer, fuller, deeper understanding of what Jesus asks of them. To be clear, I’m talking about starting with people where they are, but not being complacent about letting them stay there.
Web Software Developer position open
We’re seeking a highly-skilled web software developer for a challenging and fulfilling position at The Church of the Resurrection (Kansas City area). Work in a high-energy, innovative environment with other talented technologists. BS in computer science or related field or equivalent experience required. Minimum of 2 years professional experience with the LAMP platform and 2 years professional experience with the .NET platform. Reports to the Director of Information Technology. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to serve Christ with your software development skills. To apply, please e-mail Cork Kurlbaum (our uber-volunteer/professional IT recruiter) for immediate consideration.
Five hot technologies for 2007
Yesterday Computerworld published an interesting article predicting five technologies will be hot over the next 12 months:
1. Ruby on Rails – web application development framework
2. NAND Flash drives – solid state mass storage with big enough capacity to substitute for small hard drives and 100x the performance
3. Ultra-Wideband (UWB) – short range wireless at 200x the speed of Bluetooth
4. Grid Computing – rent a data center by the gigabyte such as Amazon’s S3 service
5. Advanced CPU architectures on higher-density chips
Kathy Sierra on user happiness
Kathy has an excellent post today on what happens when the “policies and procedures tail” wags the “user happiness dog.” I continually remind my IT team here at Resurrection that our job is to serve users, not the other way around. My team has a lot of ideas about how to increase our efficiency, which I think is great so long as it doesn’t make things more diffcult for those we serve. Do you advocate for users in your organization?
