Jake - I was a member of that Bass Guitar list a few years back - I agree with you. It was terrible. I'm not sure I looked in on the Double Bass list but I don't play Stand up so I'm not sure I would be a good fit (although I've always wanted to play and own a Stand up). On 9/7/06, Jake de Villiers <crescentbeachguitar@gmail.com> wrote: > > There are a couple of guitar lists that work well, but the best is the > Double Bass Forum on TalkBass.com. I think its the personalities involved > really, passionate AND informed being the requisite traits. > On the other hand, the Bass Guitar side of TalkBass is full of the very > worst of the internet; uninformed opinion and name-calling. > > There are good people on this list, and damn good gardeners too, Geza! > :-) > > Seeya, Jake > > On 9/7/06, Geza Polony <gezapolony@sbcglobal.net> wrote: > > > > I've wondered about this for a long time. Why are there such good lists > > for > > cars and so few for other subjects? > > > > The excellent car lists are based on two factors. First, all the cars in > > question are almost exactly the same, with tiny variations. That makes > it > > so > > a list member in Alaska can read a post on an idle stabiliser problem, > go > > out to his or her van, and find exactly the same device located at > exactly > > the same location on his engime compartment wall. We > automatically have > > something in common. Second, there are large numbers of these cars > > produced, > > which helps garner a large number of listees. A list dealing with > antique > > Wedgewood stove, for example, would satisfy the first requirement, but > > therre are too few in existence to attract a wide following. > > > > Compare this to "gardening," where the variables are almost infinite, > and > > a > > list member in Alaska will have nothing in common with one in Arizona. > > It's > > hard to relate to a cactus with pumpkin rot when you're in the Yukon. > The > > element of commonality is too general in a "gardening" list. > > > > A list equivalent in specificity to Vanagon.com would be some something > > like, "The ferms in low elevation southern Oregon" group. > > > > I did find a pretty good site on rhododendrons a few years back, but my > > soil > > didn't correspond to theirs... > > > > > > -- > Jake > 1984 Vanagon GL > 1986 Westy Weekender "Dixie" > www.crescentbeachguitar.com >
-- Thanks, Jeff 86' 85' GL (sidelined and donating organs to the 86') |
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