On March 30, 2020, that changed. My two sections of Bible and Culture were meeting remotely for the first time. There were 14 students in each class, and I already knew them personally by the time we resorted to online classes. Prior to the pandemic, we were dispassionately discussing the Bible’s role in culture. They read John Riches’s
The Bible: A Very Short Introduction. They also read from The Bible in American Life, which I edited with Philip Goff and Peter Thuesen.
In our overview chapter for that book, Goff, Thuesen, and I looked at questions from the General Social Survey that asked people why they read the Bible on their own. Our research showed that the main reason was for comfort. In class, I imagined that comfort might be a useful frame for our conversation in our new pandemic circumstances.
Скандал Марии Максаковой с Галиной Запорожцевой: подробности
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Casello di Chiavari, si va verso la chiusura per un mese I commercianti: Danno immenso
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Is Amazon s Cloud Control Like Microsoft’s Monopoly of the OS? Here’s how Amazon’s cloud strategy is and isn’t like Microsoft’s monopoly of the OS in the 90s.
If you glance at
antitrust scrutiny of Amazon s cloud computing business, it s easy to feel like it s the late 1990s all over again. Back then, Microsoft was facing similar charges, which culminated in a
2001 antitrust settlement with the federal government. Is Amazon heading toward a similar collision with government regulators? Or is it an exaggeration to
draw comparisons between Microsoft s 1990s-era embrace, extend, extinguish playbook and Amazon s present-day cloud strategy?