When I started at AFSC four decades ago—in 1981—the technology we had to master was the mimeograph machine. For those unfamiliar with the term, a mimeograph was a primitive printing press in which ink was pressed through a stencil onto paper. A basic stencil could be cut by typing on it (look up “typewriter” if you don’t know what that is, either.). That was good enough for making multiple copies minutes of meetings or announcements that didn’t need to be pretty, but you couldn’t make bold headlines, fix typos, or include images.