Pope Loved Tradition & Technology
Well taking in certain results that involve the popes recent death i thought this would be an approprriate article. web site


Well i thought its was a funny picture and funny how someone of the popes Level and age would appreciate and adapt to todays technology.
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CBS) As steadfast as John Paul II was in maintaining centuries' old traditions, he was also the pope who presided over the church's adaptation of modern technology, setting precedents even in death.
News of the Pope's death came in the form of an official e-mail sent to journalists. Vatican press officials also used SMS messages ("short message service," also known as "texting") to beam alerts on upcoming news bulletins to journalists' cell phones. Video images of the pope's body lying in state have been beamed to the world via satellite and over the Internet.
John Paul II was elected Pope in October of 1978, a year after Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak introduced the Apple II. Computers and e-mail were in their infancy and the World Wide Web hadn't yet been invented.
But as the world embraced technology, so did the Vatican - launching the Holy See Web site in 1995, in the early stage of the dot com boom. In 2003, the Church launched the Vatican Museums Web site, providing online access to its 500-year-old art collection as well as virtual tours of the Vatican Museums.
The Pope had his own email address (john_paul_ii@vatican.va), and
was the first pontiff to be photographed at the keyboard of a computer, sending an e-mail to his bishops.
The Church also used cell phone SMS to send out daily messages based on papal speeches and daily homilies. Last year, the Vatican entered into message distribution deals with Verizon Wireless and other carriers.
Well i thought its was a funny picture and funny how someone of the popes Level and age would appreciate and adapt to todays technology.


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