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1994 Fools: Microsoft to Buy Catholic Church

 

 

From Bear@bearcave.dsm.ia.us Fri Dec 23 15:10:50 EST 1994

Article: 8968 of alt.journalism

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From: Bear@bearcave.dsm.ia.us (Brad Meyers)

Date: 16 Dec 94 12:09:14

Newsgroups: alt.journalism

Subject: Microsoft to Buy Catholic Church

Message-ID: <79d_9412161254@bearcave.dsm.ia.us>

Organization: Fidonet: Your 'facts' have no bearing on my reality-Da Bear

Lines: 94

 

 

From: Newswire Mailing

To: IS Daily News Services for Executives

Cc: Newswire Mailing

Subject: MICROSOFT: Bids to Acquire Catholic Church

Date: Tuesday, November 29, 1994 7:16AM

 

 

MICROSOFT Bids to Acquire Catholic Church

 

By Hank Vorjes

 

VATICAN CITY (AP) -- In a joint press conference in St. Peter's

Square this morning, MICROSOFT Corp. and the Vatican announced that

the Redmond software giant will acquire the Roman Catholic Church in

exchange for an unspecified number of shares of MICROSOFT common

stock. If the deal goes through, it will be the first time a

computer software company has acquired a major world religion.

 

With the acquisition, Pope John Paul II will become the senior

vice-president of the combined company's new Religious Software

Division, while MICROSOFT senior vice-presidents Michael Maples and

Steven Ballmer will be invested in the College of Cardinals, said

MICROSOFT Chairman Bill Gates.

 

"We expect a lot of growth in the religious market in the next five

to ten years," said Gates. "The combined resources of MICROSOFT and

the Catholic Church will allow us to make religion easier and more

fun for a broader range of people."

 

Through the MICROSOFT Network, the company's new on-line service,

"we will make the sacraments available on-line for the first time"

and revive the popular pre-Counter-Reformation practice of selling

indulgences, said Gates. "You can get Communion, confess your sins,

receive absolution -- even reduce your time in Purgatory -- all

without leaving your home."

 

A new software application, MICROSOFT Church, will include a macro

language which you can program to download heavenly graces

automatically while you are away from your computer.

 

An estimated 17,000 people attended the announcement in St Peter's

Square, watching on a 60-foot screen as comedian Don Novello -- in

character as Father Guido Sarducci -- hosted the event, which was

broadcast by satellite to 700 sites worldwide.

 

Pope John Paul II said little during the announcement. When Novello

chided Gates, "Now I guess you get to wear one of these pointy

hats," the crowd roared, but the pontiff's smile seemed strained.

 

The deal grants MICROSOFT exclusive electronic rights to the Bible

and the Vatican's prized art collection, which includes works by

such masters as Michelangelo and Da Vinci. But critics say MICROSOFT

will face stiff challenges if it attempts to limit competitors'

access to these key intellectual properties.

 

"The Jewish people invented the look and feel of the holy

scriptures," said Rabbi David Gottschalk of Philadelphia. "You take

the parting of the Red Sea -- we had that thousands of years before

the Catholics came on the scene."

 

But others argue that the Catholic and Jewish faiths both draw on a

common Abrahamic heritage. "The Catholic Church has just been more

successful in marketing it to a larger audience," notes Notre Dame

theologian Father Kenneth Madigan. Over the last 2,000 years, the

Catholic Church's market share has increased dramatically, while

Judaism, which was the first to offer many of the concepts now

touted by Christianity, lags behind.

 

Historically, the Church has a reputation as an aggressive

competitor, leading crusades to pressure people to upgrade to

Catholicism, and entering into exclusive licensing arrangements in

various kingdoms whereby all subjects were instilled with

Catholicism, whether or not they planned to use it. Today

Christianity is available from several denominations, but the

Catholic version is still the most widely used. The Church's mission

is to reach "the four corners of the earth," echoing MICROSOFT's

vision of "a computer on every desktop and in every home".

 

Gates described MICROSOFT's long-term strategy to develop a scalable

religious architecture that will support all religions through

emulation. A single core religion will be offered with a choice of

interfaces according to the religion desired -- "One religion, a

couple of different implementations," said Gates.

 

The MICROSOFT move could spark a wave of mergers and acquisitions,

according to Herb Peters, a spokesman for the U.S. Southern Baptist

Conference, as other churches scramble to strengthen their position

in the increasingly competitive religious market.

 

KBviaNewsEDGE

 

Copyright (c) 1994 Knight-Ridder / Tribune Business News

Received via NewsEDGE from Desktop Data, Inc.: 03/07/94 19:20

 

 

 

 

[ But wait.. there's more! Our Vatican correspondent sent these: ]

 

 

 

From: sarducci@vatican.rai.net

Subject: Vatican news

 

------------

 

 

   RAI INVESTS $125 MILLION IN MICROSOFT NETWORK

  

   

   VATICAN CITY -- A division of Italian television giant RAI said

   Wednesday it has invested $125 million for a 20 percent stake in

   Microsoft Corp.'s planned on-line computer service, The Microsoft

   Divine Network.

  

   The investment lays the groundwork for delivering planned on-line

   religious services to personal computers over television cable,

   which will allow much faster and richer transmission of data such

   as sound clips and video than is permitted today over regular

   telephone lines.

  

   "We are big believers in connecting PCs to cable for on-line because

   it gives us more bandwidth to do new kinds of applications using audio

   and video," said Ziggy Mann, general manager of the Microsoft on-line

   services group.

  

   Under the agreement, RAI's Vatican Technology Ventures has made an

   all-stock investment in the newly formed Microsoft Online Church

   Partnership, which will hold the assets and cash flow of the planned

   on-line service.

  

   The service was announced in November and is expected to be launched

   next year as an optional feature (Microsoft Church) of the Windows 95

   operating system, which now is expected to be available in August 1995.

  

   The service will be offered at first over telephone lines, but Don

   Novello, senior vice president of the RAI-Vatican technology unit,

   said by 1996, some on-line services likely will be delivered over

   cable as cable modems and other equipment are perfected.

  

   While RAI would market and distribute the service to the 20 million

   households, the relationship would not be exclusive and the cable

   provider would offer connections to any on-line services available

   and requested by its customers, Novello said.

  

   America OnLine, Compuserve and other on-line service providers have

   been testing the possibility of delivering their services over cable

   rather than telephone lines.

  

   The partership announced Wednesday, which long had been rumored, is

   one of several between RAI and Microsoft.

  

   The two companies also are about to begin a small-scale test of

   interactive television services broadcasting from the Vatican, and

   have announced plans to develop a cable television channel focused

   on computing, which Novello said will be launched next year.

  

   Rob Goldman, an analyst at Imperiale Shwain, said the latest agreement

   was strategically important to both companies and signaled an

   increasing convergence of media on the information superhighway.

  

   "I think it is very strategic for Microsoft to try to leverage their

   investment in an on-line service to be able to offer it to RAI's 20

   million households," he said.

  

   "Ultimately you ought to able to access this through your television

   and not just your personal computer. Having the same on-line service

   connected to (both) would be a very powerful thing."

  

   Executives of the two companies did not provide details on how they

   arrived at a figure that values The Microsoft Divine Network at $625

   million even though it likely won't begin operation until August.

  

   "We negotiated a fair valuation based on what we know today," Novello

   said in a Vatican conference call with reporters and analysts.

  

   Mann said Microsoft had no current plans to take on additional equity

   partners in the on-line business, "but if the right deal or right

   partner came along we'd be open to that."

  

 

 

 

 

  

   POPE CELEBRATES CHRISTMAS MASS ON THE INFORMATION SUPERHIGHWAY

 

 

   VATICAN CITY -- Pope John Paul II led the world's 960 million Roman

   Catholics in Christmas celebrations Sunday at a midnight mass that

   included prayers and praise for technology and the family.

  

   More than 10,000 people, including members of the Vatican Technology

   group, crowded into St. Peter's Basilica, Christendom's largest church,

   for the traditional sung mass broadcast live around the world.

 

   They were joined on the information superhighway by a select number of

   subscribers to the Microsoft Divine Network pilot, a recently formed

   joint venture between the Redmond giant and the italian RAI cable

   communication network.

  

   As is customary with the Christmas midnight mass, the pope's homily

   centered on the Biblical story of the birth of Jesus.

  

   The pope usually reserves his most powerful comments on world events

   for his Christmas Day "Urbi et Orbi" (to the city and the world)

   blessing and message from the central balcony of the Basilica.

  

   "During the night of the Lord's birth, the shepherds guarding their

   flock in the fields round Bethlehem heard the words inviting them to

   go to the place where the Child was laid," the 74-year-old pope said

   during the homily.

  

   "An angel said to them, 'Behold, I bring you good news of great joy

   which will come to all the people; for to you is born this day in the

   City of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord'.

  

   "The shepherds of Bethlehem are thus able to realize that the way of

   salvation passes through the family. We too have been able to realize

   this truth once more during this year that is about to end...this year

   has been the year of technology for the entire family."

  

   The pope has often spoken this year in favor of the traditional

   family and against what he says is a frontal assault on its values

   by the technological revolution, and praised Microsoft's Christian

   initiative to end world suffering.

  

   He has repeatedly called on families to fight what he says are their

   greatest enemies on the information superhighway: "mushrooming

   sex-crazed user groups, pedofiles, gay and lesbian militants,

   perverted adult stories", which the Pontiff credited to the work

   of the devil.

  

   The pope, looking healthy and alert, wore vestments of gold and white

   to symbolize the message of joy and hope brought into the world with

   Christ's birth in Bethlehem, complemented by a discrete gold pin

   bearing the embossed logo of the new Microsoft Divine Network.

  

   He also said during the electronically transmitted homily that he

   had not forgotten those who were suffering behind their screens.

  

   "We find ... happiness in the songs which from midnight tonight are

   heard here in St. Peter's Basilica and throughout the world, thanks

   to the marvels of technology" he said.

  

   "They are heard even in the midst of censorship, as can be confirmed

   by those experiencing interdictions to access religious services...

   in other places where people have suffered or continue to suffer.

   Joy at the birth of the son of God is greater than suffering."

  

   The Polish pope is celebrating his 17th Christmas season as the Roman

   Catholic Church's supreme leader since his election in October 1978.

   The electronic broadcast was the first time a pope reached out to the

   information superhighway's virtual crowd.

  

   Traditionally, tens of thousands of people flock to St. Peter's Square

   on Christmas Day to listen to the "Urbi et Orbi" message and hear the

   pope wish the world holiday greetings in more than 50 languages.

 

   For the first time in history this year, a select number of subscribers

   to the Microsoft Divine Network pilot were able to enjoy the Pontiff's

   message from behind their computer screens.

  

.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From stevemc@eskimo.com Fri Dec 23 16:02:17 EST 1994

Article: 83294 of alt.folklore.computers

Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers

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From: stevemc@eskimo.com (Steve McCallister)

Subject: Catholic Church Proves Someone Still has Sense of Humor

Message-ID:

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Date: Wed, 21 Dec 1994 07:26:56 GMT

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Lest you think that the trees grow too close together here for anyone

to have a sense of humor (i.e., MS's response to MS-Catholic buy-out

hoax), here's some excerpts from today's "Seattle Times" (12/20/94):

 

"Church Mourns Miracle That Might Have Been"

 

(Starts saying a tongue-in-cheek response to the rumor came from a

Seattle Catholic spokersperson who was "profoundly disappointed"

MS doesn't want to buy the church.)

 

John McCoy, Public Affairs Director for the Seattle Archdiocese

said, "We could have had a material as well as a spiritual

Christmas...."

 

"Offended?" said McCoy, " We thought our prayers had been answered."

 

McCoy offered the following explanations why the union would have

been mutually beneficial:

 

  "We've had 2,000 years of working with icons... Windows has only done

   it for 3."

 

  "I hear there's not much attention to dress at Microsoft...We've

   got a clothing line that draws a crowd and dates back two

   millennia."

 

McCoy also observered that "We'd love to have some computer types with

color laptops at our church bazaars...what an alternative to the

cake walk... and the fish pond."

 

Archbishop Thomas Murphy was unavailable for comment, McCoy explained,

"He's surfing in cyberspace."

 

 

 

 

 

 

From tristan@news.dorsai.org Mon Dec 26 15:40:48 EST 1994

Article: 2624 of alt.internet.media-coverage

Newsgroups: alt.internet.media-coverage

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From: tristan@news.dorsai.org (Net-Runner)

Subject: Re: Microsoft OFFICIALLY denies Vatican hoax!

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Date: Fri, 23 Dec 1994 17:26:24 GMT

Lines: 118

 

Before anybody puts this up in a magazine, I thought I should mention

that it is a counterspoof :)

 

    

     From: Newswire Mailing

     To: IS Daily News Services for Executives 

     Cc: Newswire Mailing

     Subject: IBM Raises Ante in Religious Software Biz: Acquires

              Episcopal Church 

     Date: Thursday, 12/1/94

    

     For Immediate Release

    

          The Chairman of IBM announced today that, in response to

     Microsoft Corp.'s acquisition of the Roman Catholic Church, IBM has

     bid for and acquired the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United

     States of America for $1 billion.

          "We are the oldest and most prestigeous computer company in

     the world," he said, "and we cannot be seen to be lagging behind in

     the race for preeminence in the religious software and hardware

     markets. We have tendered an offer to the Most. Rev. Edmund

     Browning, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church and Pamela

     Chinnis, President of the House of Deputies of General Convention,

     and they have recommended acceptance to the

     shareholders^Wcommunicants."

          The Episcopal Church is one of the oldest and most respected

     denominations in the United States. Many current and former

     officeholders, including many Presidents, have been communicants.

     Although its membership was declining in recent years, the latest

     figures show a slight increase in membership. A combination with

     IBM will probably be beneficial in terms of putting "fannies in the

     seats" in Episcopal Churches across the United States.

          There will also be great benefits to IBM in terms of

     international connections through the Episcopal Church. The Church

     is one of the most senior members of the international Anglican

     communion by way of its separation from the Church of England after

     the Revolutionary War and the consecration in 1784 of its first

     Bishop, Samuel Seabury. IBM hopes to gain a foothold in the

     international religious business through these connections, and

     perhaps tender a bid for the entire Anglican Communion by the time

     of the next meeting of the world Anglican bishops in London in 1998

     (Lambeth Conference). The Archbishop of Canterbury, George Carey,

     was unreachable for comment.

    

          IBM and Episcopal Church are "good fit"

    

          IBM has had the distinction of being the first and, up until

     several years ago, the most successful computer company in the

     world. It was founded by Herman Hollerith, the inventor of the

     computer card, in the late 1800, and concentrated on business

     machines such as adding machines and typewriters until the

     invention of the computer in the 1940. They invested heavily in

     this new technology, and became rich from selling and maintaining

     them in the 1950's through 1980's.

          However, IBM's stodgy corporate culture prevented it from

     taking advantage of newer technology. It almost entirely missed the

     value of personal computer technology in the late 1970's, allowing

     other companies to use processes it developed to make so-called

     "clone" personal computers. It therefore lost out on billions of

     dollars spent on this technology over the past 15 years.

          IBM has recently spun off its typewriter and printer

     businesses and concentrated on PC building and software, and has

     even resorted to layoffs for the first time in its history. The

     slogan, "No one was ever fired for buying IBM" has become a bitter

     joke in the business world.

          The Episcopal Church was, for a long time, considered the most

     successful of the Protestant Churches in terms of wealth and power.

     Many of the rich and famous swelled its numbers, and its liturgy

     was noted for its archaic beauty as much as its treasury was noted

     for its gilt-edged bonds.

          However, in recent years, with the dying-off of the elderly

     rich and the fall in the birth rate among the bluebloods who

     remained, the Episcopal Church has suffered both a decline in

     numbers and in influence and wealth. Notwithstanding the slogan,

     "The Episcopal Church Welcomes You," numbers have only recently

     begun to increase again as the Church begins to be seen as a place

     where outcasts can take part in its life.

          Along with IBM, the Episcopal Church has had to resort to

     layoffs to balance its budget, and the merger will allow both

     organizations to trim even further their personnel costs.

          IBM's chairman said today, "We have been known as the place

     where the white-coated mystics take charge of computers in sealed

     rooms. As a direct result of this merger, our white-coated mystic

     roster will be cut by half and merged with the ordained ministry of

     the Episcopal Church. After all, they also wear white garments when

     celebrating their mysteries. The similarities outweigh the

     differences, and we think that we can bring their white-suited

     mystics up to speed in JCL and C++ within a few months."

          The Presiding Bishop and Ms. Chinnis issued a joint statement

     saying: "We welcome this merger as a meshing of two great but

     sometimes old-fashioned institutions. The merger will allow us to

     cut our technical staff by half again, and concentrate our

     resources on becoming the largest and most successful Protestant

     Church in the United States. Our first IBM mainframe is already

     being installed in the basement of 816 Second Avenue, Church

     Headquarters in New York."

          They continued: "So that we can assure ourselves that the

     Apostolic Succession will be continued, the Bishops of the

     Episcopal Church will lay hands on the Board of IBM in a ceremony

     at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. Then, the

     entire House of Bishops will travel up to Armonk, where they will

     be instructed in the use of the personal computer."

          The business writers of most US newspapers will join the

     religion correspondents in recording this momentous occasion. Both

     the business and the religious communities are awaiting the new

     developments that this historic merger will make possible.

          His Eminence, Bill Gates, had no comment.

    

     Copyright (C) 1994 Christian P. Hansen. May be reproduced with

     credit. hansen@quantime.co.uk

                                                                                         

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