Steven When you stop asking the questions then some might assume yer stupid. Or not. Dale I just worry that my questions will be worded so poorly that I will sound more stupid than I am. Although I am realizing how much I don't know but I am learning. Chalk what I said up to a bad morning and a too quick response. Thank you and I will take all responses from here at face value and use what I can. Forgive me. Steven Hopp Midland, Tx > Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 11:44:52 -0600 > From: rnossaman at cox.net > To: pianotech at ptg.org > Subject: Re: [pianotech] Yamaha Hammer Suggestion > > Jim Busby wrote: > > > Everyone’s friendly here, well , except maybe Ron… <G> > > (Just kidding. Ron’s the best.) > > Yea, yea, yea... I'm not at all hard on people who have every > right and excuse to not know anything about pianos. I likely > don't know anything about what they do for a living either. > Anyone selling their services as a qualified piano tech, > however, should have some idea what they're doing and be eager > to learn as much as they can to improve their knowledge on a > day to day basis. Someone needs to point this out once in a > while, get past the stone wall of Victorian propriety, and get > straight to the meat of the subject. We can all stand around > in clumps, congratulating ourselves on our social skills and > techniques of artfully saying nearly nothing of any use as > inoffensively and "properly" as is possible, or we can attempt > to exchange the best information we can get our hands on as > honestly and efficiently as possible, to our mutual benefit. I > prefer door #2. Keep the massage, let's have a look at the > schematic - in clumps or otherwise. > > Ron N Hotmail: Trusted email with powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now. = -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20100206/1ee394e3/attachment-0001.htm>
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