[sorry. somehow my .sig got turned off on the original] Joe, At 12:46 3/16/2004 -0600, you wrote: >finally, i am wondering - why is there such a stuck-up attitude around here? Not everybody is stuck up. I would like to be but, as a tech at a small college very near to the epicenter of nowhere, I know just how high that would fly... ;-} >in my postition as a university tech, i get far more out of a discussion >over practical matters than over theories of how to measure minute aspects >of action physics. i find such discussions interesting, but is this list >only for those who can contribute as such? No, ask away. Some people might have lost sight of the fact that the only distinguishing characteristic of listees is that they are somehow affiliated with or afflicted by colleges and/or universities. I'm sure that there is an underlying HOPE that CAUT members are better technicians than average. The truth is that there is _almost_ as wide a range of ability and experience among Cauterised technicians as in the general population of pianotechers. The original aim of the list was to have a forum to discuss problems which are unique to colleges and universities and which would (and did) absolutely bore the rest of the folks. >joe kemple (and no, i'm not a RPT (wanna make somethin' of it?)) Nope. I might wonder how close you've come to the guild and it's educational opportunities. I know that being an RPT doesn't necessarily mean that you are a great technician any more than not being one means that you are not. It does mean that you didn't just get a fork, hammer and wedges on eBay and immediately call yourself a tuner. RPT is a benchmark for competence, by the time you get it, you realise how much you _don't_ know. Conrad Hoffsommer - Music Technician Luther College, 700 College Dr., Decorah, Iowa 52101-1045 Vox-(563)-387-1204 // Fax (563)-387-1076 - Education is what you get from reading the small print. Experience is what you get from not reading it.
This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC