This bishop's response is understandable. I posted the map on More
Good Foundation's site with the hope that it has slightly more
credibility than an IP address (and probably not much more to the
general public.) I would hate for this site to encourage widespread
use of Church passwords and result in someone putting their
credentials into a phishing site.
On Apr 10, 2006, at 7:58 AM, Jay Askren wrote:
First, I want to say the website is very cool. Unfortunately, when
I forwarded it on to some of our church leaders, I got a response
that caught me a bit off guard. A member of our bishopric was very
hesitant to put his username and password to a non church sponsored
website. The more I think about it, it's a very legitimate concern
especially today when I'm getting phishing emails several times a
week. I'm sure Richard's website is just fine, but someone with
less sincere intentions than Richard could send a similar email to
this email list just as Richard did, and capture all of our
usernames and passwords to the church website as we go and log into
the website to see the cool web page he built. How can we really
know if we trust websites posted to this or any other email list
which asks for sensitive information. Any thoughts on this?
Jay
On 4/6/06, Richard K Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Here's my attempt at it:
https://www.moregoodfoundation.org/wardmap/
After entering your LDS.org username and password, it will fetch your
ward directory, geocode the addresses, and map it. Your credentials
are transmitted entirely over SSL, and are not saved.
I'm using Geocoder.us for the geocoding, which works pretty well but
isn't perfect -- some of my ward member's houses were in the wrong
place. But my BYU ward isn't very interesting anyway, since all the
markers are in one tiny clump.
Richard
---
Richard K. Miller
www.richardkmiller.com
On Apr 5, 2006, at 4:02 PM, Todd Miner wrote:
> What I'd really like to see is a mashup of the posted addresses on
> the ward web site with Google maps. Since I work at the stake
> level, I'd love to see all the stake members pinpointed on a map
> with different color pushpins for their ward assignments. I'm sure
> this is possible, and I have even found websites that will publish
> my spreadsheet full of addresses via Google maps - but they charge
> for their services.
>
>
> Sounds like a great open source project. :)
>
> > Date: Wed, 05 Apr 2006 07:02:39 -0600
> > From: "Ed Ashton" < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Subject: [Ldsoss] RE: Welcome to the "Ldsoss" mailing list (Digest
> > mode)
> >
> > Besides the rudimentary mapping on the lds website using mapquest
> does
> > anybody know of any other mapping or GIS related projects the
> Church has
> > embarked on? I'm a membership clerk in our local unit and have
> found using
> > ESRI's Arcview very helpful for leaders, members and missionaries
> to know
> > where members live. Not to mention the the plethora of other
useful
> > information that a GIS can contain.
>
>
> Crush! Zap! Destroy! Junk e-mail trembles before the might of
> Windows Live(tm) Mail beta. Windows Live(tm) Mail beta
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