Google

For those of you who don’t know, Google usually changes their logo to go along with the holiday. This morning, I woke up and thought I would go to Google.com to see what their logo looked like. Here is a screenshot of what I saw today when I logged on:

20050530_GoogleMemorialDay.png

Just to make sure of what I was seeing, I refreshed my browser. Nope, they did not change their logo. Why didn’t Google change their logo today? Google, I call on you to issue an appology, change your logo, and honor those who have served, fought, and died for our freedom.

Is Google liberal? I don’t know, but it is certanly looking like it. First they refuse conservive adds now this. Does anyone have any idea of an alternate search enging that is as good?

[Update 10-10-2007  05:44:56] I found a contest where an individual sponsored a contest to help Google develop a log for Memorial Day.  Here is a link to the post where I talk about that.

SOX

If you work in IT at a publicly held company, your life was changed dramatically late last year and early this year. You know what I'm talking about…SOX. You also know how "symbolism over substance" what companies are doing is. You know it doesn't really do anything but make your life harder. It makes it harder to do your job. It makes it harder to server your customers. Everything is called SOX. Everything falls under SOX.

Cyndi found this article in the Washington Post for me about it. Their site requires a free login to access it. The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/18/AR2005051802255.html. Here are a few exerpts:

Leave the desk for 10 minutes and the computer screen goes dead. Why must I sign in all over again? "Sarbanes-Oxley," says the poor soul in the tech department.

This all-powerful Sarbanes-Oxley turns out to be a law Congress passed in 2002 after the Enron collapse to protect investors by forcing publicly held businesses to more accurately report information about themselves.

Nothing in the law specifically requires companies to turn cubicle life into a journey through the stages of hell. But that's how the law is being interpreted across the land. Sen. Paul Sarbanes, the Maryland Democrat who is retiring next year, has had to watch what he thought of as a guardian of ordinary investors' assets being transformed into a scapegoat for all things annoying at the office.

"You have some way-out requirements, and the company says that's what Sarbanes-Oxley says we have to do, but these changes are neither in the act nor in the regulations implementing the act," Sarbanes tells me. "I don't know where some of these things came from."

"It's absurd how the law is being used to justify these silly timeouts and constant demands for you to type in your password. The law is just being used as an excuse for placing restrictions on workers."

Sarbanes sighs at how his name is being taken in vain as a nation of office workers grouses about new incursions on their time and sanity. "Some people in the business world think it's unnecessary regulation," he says, "but look at the price we paid with Enron and those scandals in losses of jobs and confidence in our capital markets. We didn't set out to create onerous requirements. We were confronted with these gross abuses, and we set out to protect the American investor."

Now, Sen. Sarbanes says it isn't what he meant. It isn't what the law meant. Well, we can learn two things from this

1. The law needs to say what is meant.
2. Business will take symbolism over substance to try and comply with what the law says.

So, we need smaller government and business that thinks.

1st Church Visit

Cyndi and I have started the process of finding a church home since we moved to Richmond. Today, we visited Staples Mill Road Baptist Church. We visited there once before when we were house hunting. They are a member of the Southern Baptist Conservatives of Virginia. They currently have an interm pastor and are looking for a new full-time pastor. The church seems active in missions, evangelism, etc…. There are also several other people at the church who work at the IMB.

Lawnmower

Since Cyndi and I are renting a house, we had to buy a lawnmower. I debated buying a cheapie or a good one. I decided on a good compromise…. I bought a Troy Built 21" Rear Bag Push Mower.

Mowed the grass for the first time Friday. The mower did a good job. Our yard is so small that it took me about 15 minutes to mow the entire thing!

Sunday School Shindig

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Before we left Columbus, we had a Sunday School shindig. Part Amazing Race part going away party. We took some pictures. To see them, go to http://techs4jesus.dynup.net/webpics/20050514_SSFellowship/ the flickr set of the pictures. Enjoy!

[Update 22 Dec 2012 07:22] Updated link to flickr set AND added the picture

Move Pics Posted

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To see pictures of our move (packing, loading, unloading, etc…), go to the flickr set. Enjoy!

[Update 2012-12-26 06:08:24] The link was bad.  Updated to point to the flickr set.  Also added picture.

Comcast Speed

When we moved to Richmond, we got Comcast broadband. Here is how its speed looks:

20050528_ComcastSpeed.PNG

New IMB Missionaries

The IMB recently commissioned the second largest group of missionaries ever. According to this Baptist Press article,

The second-largest group of new missionaries in the history of the Southern Baptist International Mission Board featured plenty of variety. But all 116 of them share one thing in common: a clear call from God to go to the nations with the Gospel.