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Michael Duduit
May 2007
Wouldn’t it be helpful if airlines were more like churches, each with its own distinctive characteristics?
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Michael Duduit
March 2007
It’s been almost seven years now since my wife and I faced the big decision: what to name our new baby.
Our first son —...
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Michael Duduit
January 2007
A federal judge recently ruled that the
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Michael Duduit
November 2006
There are some folks who always have to have the last word in a conversation. Then again, when someone is on his or her deathbed,...
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Michael Duduit
September 2006
I received a couple of emails about Mars coming amazingly close to earth on August 27. Maybe you got the same email, which begins...
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Michael Duduit
July 2006
Now that American Idol has picked its silver-haired hero and started a national tour, the Fox network has to fill those lonely broadcast...
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Michael Duduit
May 2006
Many of my friends from college and seminary days now have children in college and beyond. Since my two boys are only 10 and 6, I...
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Are You Y2K Compliant?
Are You Y2K Compliant?
By Michael Duduit
I got some bad news the other day: the software we use to record and maintain the subscriber files of Preaching is not "Y2K compliant." That's the shorthand the computer techies use to describe software that on January 1, 2000, will assume that it is now 1900 and, since computers didn't exist then, will promptly blow up or similarly evaporate from view. This whole mess occurred because when people were creating lots of the software we use, they wanted to save space in all that programming code. So instead of coding "1982" they just coded "82" and the computer was smart enough to insert the "19." Except now this brilliant piece of technology isn't smart enough to know that time doesn't move backward. Apparently the techies didn't think about all this software still being in use when the year 2000 rolled around. They obviously don't know me; I'm still using the eraser that Miss Evans gave me in fifth grade. (If it ain't broke, don't throw it out.) So now everybody who uses computers to manage information -- banks, the IRS, schools, and little publishing companies like ours -- must buy new software or have high-priced computer techies spend many hours (at a rate of approximately ten jillion dollars an hour) to make us "Y2K Compliant." Which suddenly starts putting things into perspective. Those computer programming guys created this problem, and now who do we have to hire to fix it? Same guys (or their kid brothers)! And it all comes into view: the year 2000 is not simply the turn of a new millennium. It's the ultimate job security for computer programmers! Now if only we preachers can figure out a way to convince our congregations that listening to our sermons will help them to become "LY2K Compliant." It stands for "Life in the Year 2000 Compliant." And best of all, it's true!
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As I was reading about the strategy of presenting an argument, these three images—sheep,...
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Once known as the White House "hatchet man" during the Nixon administration, in 1973...
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In this year’s 2008 annual survey of visual resources, we want to share with you...
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