Personally, I dont worry about this kinda thing in the slightest. Folks most just dont have the time or the energy to do much of "do it yourself" kinds of stuff, and those that do are welcome to it. I often enough get called in to clean up a mess after such work. Those very few who start off this way and start tuning for money either fall quickly off the wayside, or become interested and eventually become professionals. The very very few that end up being what I would term frauds, really cause so little problem its just not worth my time to bother about. Customers who use these kinds of fellows are generally not the kind of customers I am interested in anyways. Robert can not prevent someone from linking to his site, even if he wanted to. "Todd L. Mapes" wrote: > Friends, > > I typed in TuneLab on a search engine, and this is one of the sites that > came up as a result of the search: > > Appendix One- Do it Yourself Tuning > http://www.balaams-ass.com/piano/ap1tune.htm > Repair, restore, and tune, allign, adjust, adjustment, your piano. > Order > piano parts and tools. Piano tuners hate this book. Save hundreds > of > dollars. This is the only book of its kind anywhere. Our Classified > Page > will help you to buy and sell > > I looked it over, and when I tried to get back to the home page > (http://www.balaams-ass.com/) I got a message on my computer that said > something about this site being a security risk and that it could > potentially be attempting to do malicious things to my computer. The > first site listed contains links to Robert's web site for downloading > TuneLab. I can't imagine that Robert Scott would legitimately be > associated with this web site, and wanted to bring it to everyone's > attention for your comments and observations. > > Todd L. Mapes > Fort Smith, AR -- Richard Brekne Associate PTG, N.P.T.F. Bergen, Norway
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