Well said Ron,
   The lutelist format and its arrangement is clearly much more suited
   for the proper and serious, but still enjoyable, exchange of views and
   for sharing information.  It may be seen by some as 'old fashioned'
   (and
   I'm not sure what this really means in this context anyway) but is this
   really a valid judgement for what it aims to do. The use of email etc
   allows
   slightly more considered communications than the need for adulation.
   It would be a backward step to employ a format which focuses primarily
   on social media, advertising and the number of hits, 'likes'  and such
   like.......
   MH

   On Friday, 4 September 2020, 13:02:17 BST, Ron Andrico
   <praelu...@hotmail.com> wrote:
     I'm guessing that it was an oversight to copy the entire lutelist
   with
     this message thread, which shares some awkward ideas (and language).
     Nevertheless, the personalities involved need to understand that
   there
     abides an intelligent segment of participants on the lutelist who
   will
     never contribute on the Faceb**k platform.  That particular platform
   is
     the opposite of how Wayne laid out and maintained the lutelist.  The
     format (which I call MyFace because participants seem to care very
     little about what others post) is sufficient for trivia and vanity
     postings, but for musicians who want to promote themselves, Faceb**k
     actually suppresses distribution of any post that emits even a whiff
   of
     commercial potential.  The platform is focused on two primary
     objectives: 1) encouraging posters to reveal more information than
   they
     should, 2) monetizing said information in every and any way possible.
     Not the same as the lutelist, which, thanks to Wayne, has steadfastly
     embodied the outmoded egalitarian aspects of the internet.  It is now
   a
     brave new world populated by the greedy and deceptive masquerading as
     old school free-culture types.  Good luck with following up on your
     ideas, but don't be surprised if a large number of people choose to
   not
     participate in your scheme.
     RA
     From: [1]lute-...@new-old-mail.cs.dartmouth.edu
     <[2]lute-...@new-old-mail.cs.dartmouth.edu> on behalf of LSA Editor
     <[3]lsaq.edi...@gmail.com>
     Sent: Thursday, September 3, 2020 9:56 PM
     To: LSA President <[4]lutesocietyamericapresid...@gmail.com>;
   lutelist Net
     <[5]Lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
     Subject: [LUTE] Re: My web site
         Hi Cathy,
         I am including Sean about your questions on the lutelist versus
   FB.
         Sean looks both them and Nig even more than I do, so can give you
   a
         better answer.  Here are my sanswers:
         The lutelist is old-fashioned and it's biggest virtue is that we
     have
         access to people like Art Ness and Martin Shepherd to answer
         questions.  It's vibe is a bit more toward the serious lute
   player,
     but
         the people are mostly patient with newbies with questions. It is
   not
         the place for promoting you CD or next concert.
         FB IS the place to promote anything and everything and I think
   Larry
         spends time getting rid of the messages that off topic.  FB has a
         younger vibe - or maybe it had a younger vibe when it started. I
     hear
         it has been taken over by groups like the LSA and some musicians
   use
     it
         instead of a web page.  FB can have pictures and mostly postings
   are
         very short.
         I don't think the lutelist needs much curating, at least not
   right
     now.
         We've had a couple of differences of opinion in the past, but
     nothing
         recently.  Another big benefit for me is that people access the
         lutelist using their own emails and I can keep the email address
   for
         future contacts. The people there are a big source of additions
   to
     my
         lists of prospective LSA members. I can be the moderator for the
         lutelist until it's up and running and we find a good person to
   take
         the job over. We don't have the problem with the LL of every tom,
     dick
         and harry wanting to join it - it's more for the cognisenti.
   David
         Smith might be a good moderator - he's been on the LL for years.
         When I had an orpharion for sale on Wayne's list (and it wasn't
         selling) Wayne checked in with me to see if it was still for sale
     after
         about a year.  This seems to me to be a small job that only needs
         looking at every few months.  I think the other part of  job is
     posting
         new instruments for sale.
         We would also need to make sure people know where to find both
   the
     LL
         and LFS lists - a few CC blitzes?, since people are used to going
   to
         his Dartmouth site and it will be linked on places like the ELS
     site.
         Nancy
         I agree. Now that we are back on solid footing â Whew! We should
   not
         piss off people like Wayne after all he has done. We should
   probably
         not piss of anyone! â we can proceed.
         What happens on the lute list that doesn't happen on Facebook or
   on
         Danny Shoskes' site? Just curious.
         What kind of curating does ithe lute list need to work well and
   be a
         benefit? There is little point in setting one up if we don't have
         someone dedicated to keeping it operating properly, not only from
     the
         tech standpoint, but just as important, to keep nasty people off.
     The
         same question applies to the Lutes for sale listings. At the very
     least
         we need someone ready to take posts down when the seller has
     completed
         the transaction.
         I might see if Chris Henriksen can tell me if Bill Good would be
     good
         for this kind of thing. He did not want to be a custodian, but
   maybe
         this is more to his liking. Maybe Lyn Abissi will know someone.
     These
         two were making great strides toward setting up a local chapter
   here
     in
         Boston, but the pandemic knocked that out, as far as I know.
         At the next Board meeting, hopefully this fall, maybe some of our
     new
         Board members will either step up or know someone who could be
     asked.
         Feeling relieved that we are on a better track with this.
         Cathy
         Catherine Liddell
         President/Chairman of the Board
         [uc?id9TJhsqVKmGMNWhuR19WWXJYQU0&amp;export=download]
         [1]www.lutesocietyofamerica.org
         On Sep 3, 2020, at 12:33 PM, LSA Editor
   <[2][6]lsaq.edi...@gmail.com>
         wrote:
         I think we should go ahead and get a new lutelist and For Sale
   list
         going so that we can harvest as many people as possible from the
   old
         lists ASAP - before they go away.  Wayne has not mentioned his
     archive
         of all the old discussions on the lutelist and I am pretty sure
   from
         the note below he will not be giving them to us or anyone else.
   I
         think people do use that, but if he wants to keep it for himself,
         that's fine. How about if I go ahead and start copying the text
   and
         contacts from the For Sale list? Jerry says he can set up a new
   lute
         list very quickly.
         I think both the lutelist and the For Sale list have been around
   for
     so
         long that there will be dead links for years bouncing toward
   Wayne's
         old computers. I am less interested in the pictures because David
     van
         Edwards has done a lot with pictures for the ELS. I have never
     looked
         at his treatises - again it is less interesting.
         Nancy
         HI Cathy
         Thanks for your thoughtful and carefully worded message.  I guess
   I
         was a little careless in the wording of my original message.  My
         intention was that someone, (perhaps the LSA), could start their
   own
         list, using their own software and computers, and announce it on
   my
         list when they were set up.  Maybe that was what you folks meant,
     but I
         got the impression that my input was required, and I am retiring
   and
     no
         longer want to be involved in doing sysadmin work.  The same goes
     for
         the "lutes for sale" list.  I would like to disconnect and turn
   off
     my
         list completely and not leave anything hanging.  In this case I
     would
         not want any advertisements left on another web site, where the
         advertisers might not know how to take their ad down.  To be
   blunt,
     I
         would not want people to say "Wayne had a great for sale site but
         something changed and now he isn't doing such a great job
   anymore".
     It
         would be great to the LSA to start its own great "lutes for sale"
     site.
         My pages of lute pictures arranged by date were intended to show
         people how the hand positions changed of the ages, but because I
     didn't
         explicitly say that I don't think anyone got the message.  Oh
   well.
     I
         am sure that better pictures are available on the web now.  The
   set
     of
         treatises on hand position is worth saving, most everything else
     exists
         to answer questions that people would email to me.
         I am backing up my web sites, so nothing will be lost, and I may
     start
         another web site in the future.  But right now I am retiring, and
     there
         are a lot of pieces to sort out and put away, and I apologize if
     that
         makes me a little irritable!
           Wayne
         On Thu, Sep 3, 2020 at 8:29 AM LSA President
         <[3][7]lutesocietyamericapresid...@gmail.com> wrote:
         Dear Wayne,
         The value you have added, the contribution you have made to the
   lute
         world with all of the work you have put into the lute list, the
     links
         to lute art, the lutes for sale and the TAB program over the
   years
     is
         immeasurable. I suspect thousands have taken advantage of what
   you
     have
         offered. Because of that, when you put out the announcement on
   the
     lute
         list that you'd be retiring and the server would be shut down in
   a
         month's time, a certain tidal wave of panic developed. "What will
         happen to the lute list?" "How will we buy and sell our
     instruments?"
         etc. Our minds quickly rushed to come up with a way to save all
   this
         material. It all snowballed from there. This is a testimony to
   how
         valuable what you have been offereing is seen to be.
         I will confess that I was affected by the wording at the end of
   your
         announcement, "If someone wants to take up running the lute mail
     listâ¦"
         because it seemed to open the door to run-away thinking on the
   part
     of
         myself, and other LSA folk, some of whom have contacted you
     directly,
         assuming, incorrectly it's now clear, that you were looking for a
     home
         for at least some parts of your work.
         I apologize profusely for this reaction on our part. We, I,
   should
     have
         contacted you directly to ask what you were planning, and to
   offer
     to
         be helpful in some way, rather than assume that of course you
   would
         want your work to carry on. We have come off as pushy vultures,
   and
         that is ugly and unbecoming of a society that tries to engender
   good
         will and cooperation. We fail, sometimes, as we have here, but we
   do
         try.
         It does feel sad to me to read "I am retiring, and my projects
   will
         retire with me." Of course that's your choice to make. Do I
     understand
         correctly then, that you would have no objection if we followed
   the
         leads in your email here, assuming we find the personnel to do
   so?
     This
         would involve, as you describe:
         1) setting up a lute list on our site, and announcing on your
   site
     that
         people can migrate over to the one we set up.
         2) contacting those with instruments to sell, asking them if they
     want
         to continue on our site.
         It is clear to us that it will make no sense to undertake either
   of
         these efforts if we do not have someone to curate them properly.
         I ask your forgiveness for our having come across like vultures.
   We
         were trying to help, and did so badly.
         All best wishes faithful lute lover!
         Cathy
         Catherine Liddell
         President/Chairman of the Board
         [uc?id9TJhsqVKmGMNWhuR19WWXJYQU0&amp;export=download]
         [4]www.lutesocietyofamerica.org
         On Sep 2, 2020, at 11:48 AM, Wayne Cripps
   <[5][8]w...@cs.dartmouth.edu>
         wrote:
     Dear Everyone
       I am a bit bothered by what seems to me to be a "grab everything"
     approach to
     my various lute related web projects on your parts.  I am retiring,
   and
     my proje
     cts will retire with me.  The next person's job is to take over with
     their own p
     roject, not to copy or clone mine.  My projects are mine, they are
   not
     LSA proje
     cts, even if I have been a member of the LSA in the past.
     - the lute mail list runs on propriatary software.  If you would like
     to start a
     nd maintain a lute mail list there are many excellent packages out
     there.  [6]gr
     oups.io seems to be a good one.  Once you have it set up you can
     announce it on
     my list.
     - Lutes For Sale - because people who advertise on my lutes for sale
     page expose
       themselves to quite a bit of spam, it is important that they can
     contact someon
     e (me) to have their information removed as soon as possible.  For
   this
     reason i
     t would not be appropriate for you to copy the existing list.  If you
     want to st
     art your own list you could write to the advertisers on my list and
   ask
     them if
     they would like to advertise on your list.  Then they will have a
     connection wit
     h you when it comes time to remove their posting.
     - Lute Tablature - Sarge Gerbode has a very complete site for
     Renaissance music
     in tablature, which certainly has all of the same music that my site
     has, given
     that he has scraped my site.  If I find a demand for my tablature I
   may
     start an
     other site somewhere.  You may have technical issues copying the
     tablature witho
     ut some effort.
     - Web pages - the fact is that anyone can copy anything off the web,
     but I do fe
     el that my pages are my creation and work, and if someone simply
   clones
     it they
     are not respecting that.  (I must say here that Caroline Usher
     contributed quite
       a lot in the early days.)  Besides, the wayback machine has it all.
     The LSA di
     d once have a web site on my computer, but it was their site, and my
     site is my
     site.
       My feeling is also that in efforts like this, people are eager to
   jump
     in to th
     e project, but they don't tend to stick around.  The lutes for sale
     project need
     s constant maintenance and the mail list requires supervision.
         Sincerely,
           Wayne
     --
     Nancy Carlin
     Administrator & LSA Quarterly General Editor
     Lute Society of America
     PO Box 6499
     Concord, CA 94524
     925-686-5800
     --
     Nancy Carlin
     Administrator & LSA Quarterly General Editor
     Lute Society of America
     PO Box 6499
     Concord, CA 94524
     925-686-5800
         --
     References
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References

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