Own Tomorrow: not AMP

I stum­bled across quite a visu­ally beau­ti­ful com­mer­cial today. Its script follows:

In the future, one thing is certain.

Someone’s going to drive it.

Someone’s going to col­lect it.

Someone’s going to lie on it. Sit on it. Sleep on it.

Drink too much Ger­man beer on it.

Some­one will sit in front row seats, here, here and here.

Some­one will land it. Some­one will save it. Some­one will find it. Then get hap­pily lost in it.

Some­one will sleep five stars, some­one will sleep under the stars.

Some­one will ski down it, fly over it, and scream across it.

Beau­ti­ful things will still be made in the future. Some­one is going to buy them.

Someone’s going to walk it. Some­one is going to ride it.

And at the end of the day, someone’s going to watch it.

And there’s no rea­son why that some­one can’t be you.

Since 1849, AMP has helped more Aus­tralians own their tomorrows.

Own tomor­row. AMP.

Emo­tive as it was, it is also, of course, absolute hog­wash — GFC or no!

Some­one once told this story:

A rich man once thought to him­self, ‘What shall I do, for I have nowhere to store my crops?’

He decided, ‘I will do this: I will tear down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.’

But God said to the man, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you, and the things you have pre­pared, whose will they be?’

You don’t own your tomor­row. It’s not even yours today. The Bible says there is one good kind of stor­ing up to be done — I can “store up God’s word in my heart, that I might not sin against Him.” (Ps 119:11) — yet I still fail and need to fall upon His mercy.

The man who told that story was Jesus. (Luke 12:16 – 20) He promises peace and a greater secu­rity than all the riches of the world.

Own eter­nal life. Jesus.

# by Josh on February 24th, 2010 Tags: , , , , ,
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Equip Schools website

We recently refreshed one of our core prod­uct web­sites, Equip Schools. It hits a fairly com­plex mix of schools, parents/carers and indi­vid­ual stu­dents and we spent a lot of time try­ing to best artic­u­late how the pro­gramme speaks to the var­ied con­cerns of each of these groups.

The prod­uct has three curriculum-driven strands in the form of work­shops, pub­li­ca­tions and software.

The soft­ware strand is cer­tainly the most dis­tinct of the three in terms of con­ven­tional expec­ta­tions of life-skills / per­sonal man­age­ment pro­grammes that schools already run — and we’re still com­ing to terms with the best way to artic­u­late that within the web­site. We’ve devel­oped a brief (16 minute) train­ing DVD that accom­pa­nies the prod­uct — how­ever, this is obvi­ously too long for ini­tial con­tact and, while being highly explana­tory, doesn’t really artic­u­late the thou­sands of hours of edu­ca­tional psy­chol­ogy research and stu­dent men­tor­ing that inform the prod­uct as it stands today.

Dis­till­ing that down to a 10 minute pack­age is a tall ask, but it’s also some­thing near on the hori­zon as we seek to make this avail­able to indi­vid­u­als beyond the school context.

Division not Peace: ESM Weekend Away 2010

This week­end Evening Church from St Matthias went away to the North­ern Beaches together on a week­end enti­tled “Divi­sion Not Peace”, exam­in­ing Jesus’ teach­ings from Luke’s account of his life.

The teach­ings of Jesus were clearly divi­sive in the Gospels and con­tinue to be so today. Light illu­mi­nates dark­ness. Christ reveals sin.

He also pays for it. And is worth fol­low­ing. The unsweet­ened real­ity of the end of Luke 9 is at once immensely painful and wholly true.

Our speaker, David Ould, faith­fully preached Jesus’ words with­out coat­ing them in false com­fort or apol­o­gis­ing for their truth and good­ness. The hard truth of the gospel is such that, though we find great joy in the King who pays sin’s great price, we wept and prayed for those who do not yet acknowl­edge Him.

We fail as much as any fallen, sin­ful peo­ple do. Pray for us that we would love like Jesus, which rightly includes declar­ing the real­ity of divi­sion as sin is exposed by the gospel.

Free press in fragile situations

In a ret­ro­spec­tive piece in the SMH con­cern­ing a new pub­li­ca­tion out of the Uni­ver­sity of Mel­bourne deal­ing with how media work­ers responded to and processed last year’s Black Sat­ur­day fires, Mallesons IP part­ner Natalie Hickey writes (among other things) that “It is worth reflect­ing that a healthy democ­racy does not need free speech at all costs. Words can wound and infor­ma­tion can cause pain.”

What a realisation!

So often in our tabloid, syndicated-to-the-hilt, visu­ally ori­ented, and, of course, com­mer­cially dri­ven media the objec­tive of “the public’s right to know” is utilised as an over­rid­ing jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for pub­li­ca­tion of con­tent that, sim­ply, is unnec­es­sary for the pub­lic and unhelp­ful for those it concerns.

In the Bible, a king called David writes, “You love all words that devour, O deceit­ful tongue.” Words can wound, and infor­ma­tion can cause pain — and so often our media will “love evil more than good, and lying more than speak­ing what is right.” (Also David, Psalm 52) The defense that it rates well is inad­e­quate, yet it is enthralling to dis­cover a gen­uine dis­cus­sion of jour­nal­is­tic ethics that reflects bib­li­cal truth about speech.

God teaches that Chris­t­ian peo­ple are to speak the truth in love, and that, what­ever other abil­i­ties we may have been given by Him, if we don’t exer­cise those with love, we have noth­ing. Oh, that our press would oper­ate on this basis — to do so would serve the “pub­lic inter­est” well!

# by Josh on January 19th, 2010 Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,
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So you think Social Media’s a fad?

This video goes some way to dis­pelling that myth. Some of the sta­tis­tics appear hyper­bolic or dubi­ously ver­i­fied, and as with much con­tent on YouTube it avoids any form of rig­or­ous ref­er­enc­ing, but enough of it is true that it stands regardless.

# by Josh on December 2nd, 2009 Tags: , , , ,
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Growling at PayPal

We signed up for a Pay­Pal account ages ago and never got around to using to process pay­ments (we’ve got a mer­chant facil­ity with Comm­Bank so there was no great urgency to the situation) — and since set­ting it up the per­son respon­si­ble has moved on.

Our unver­i­fied account has never processed a sin­gle pay­ment, and yet with the amount of ID they require for some­thing as sim­ple as a con­tact name change you could get a pass­port in some countries.

Busi­ness Con­tact Name Change
To process your name change request, you need to fax in addi­tional infor­ma­tion. Please pro­vide a cur­rent photo iden­ti­fi­ca­tion and one of the other fol­low­ing documents:

  • A copy of a valid photo iden­ti­fi­ca­tion show­ing your new name.
  • Accept­able forms of photo iden­ti­fi­ca­tion are a driver’s license, pass­port or any other state or gov­ern­ment issued photo identification.
  • A copy of a recent util­ity bill show­ing your new name and address exactly as they appear on your Pay­Pal account.
  • A copy of a recent bank state­ment for the bank account listed on your Pay­Pal account (if applicable).

Please include a let­ter on com­pany sta­tionery indi­cat­ing the pri­mary email address, cur­rent name, address and tele­phone num­ber on the Pay­Pal account, the rea­son for the name change, and the new busi­ness con­tact name.

So that we can process your request effi­ciently, please ensure that your doc­u­ments are valid and leg­i­ble. As always, any per­sonal iden­ti­fi­ca­tion infor­ma­tion that you sub­mit to Pay­Pal will remain secure and will never be trans­mit­ted to any third party.

Pay­Pal have never had a rep as a par­tic­u­larly cus­tomer friendly organ­i­sa­tion, but this isn’t even ben­e­fi­cial to them! With no trans­ac­tions in the past and less doc­u­men­ta­tion than this required for estab­lish­ing a NEW account it doesn’t pose any cred­i­ble threat so far as hijacked accounts/money laundering/whatever goes, and they need to spend time review­ing doc­u­ments sent in a thor­oughly non­stan­dard way. The bank account ver­i­fi­ca­tion process is pretty good in terms of automa­tion (albeit risky — you’re essen­tially giv­ing Pay­Pal license to do what­ever with all funds in that account) — this is most cer­tainly not.

Any­one have any good, low % fee or cost/transaction way of hook­ing into CBA’s Evolve sys­tem? The appli­ca­tion doesn’t war­rant us spend­ing heaps set­ting it up just yet, and Pay­Pal are good at mak­ing things way too risky and dif­fi­cult. Grumble.

Sundae lies

From Tori

Tonight while dri­ving me home, Josh and I stopped at Mac­cas and bought a choco­late sun­dae. He asked me whether there are McFlur­ries in China and I said yes. He was glad, and joked that this isn’t some­thing he’d be will­ing to give up for Jesus. We laughed, because this isn’t true. We both would give up much more than McDonald’s ice­creams for Jesus. I love this boy.

# by Josh on October 12th, 2009 Tags: , , , , , ,
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