JK, you bring up two good points. First, I agree this ranking should be renamed (for different reasons than you). But you'll have to come up with something better than "Linford and Friends."
(I do like the "List of Greatest Courses" part though)
Concerning your second interesting point, I'd like to hear from more people about whether to publish names along with results. A user name will be required to vote, but I was not planning on making these results public unless the member himself requests it. If you are truly interested in the opinions of established GCAers, you could start this yourself by publicizing your own answers to get others to do so as well. I don't think abstaining will benefit anyone.
Once again, I'd just like to remind you that you are voting for a course that you think qualifies for TOP 100 IN THE WORLD. That means a course could be better than 200 courses on the current ballot, but still not be worthy of nomination. I will not be including nominations from posters that say something like "I don't think this is really a top 100 course, but..."
It's my fault for not making this clear enough from the outset. If you really think a course should be considered as top 100 in the world, by all means nominate it. Just remember, this is for a top 100 list, not a top 500 list.
Tom,
"3. I will second Capilano (even though I wouldn't vote for it myself) because I swear it was on my original list, or should have been." -Probably my mistake, I was a bit hasty cutting down your list to asterisk-only courses.
"4. Are you going to let architects vote -- assuming we don't vote for our own courses?"
-Yes, I think the experience architects on this sight outweighs any bias they might have.
"5. On a quick read through the list there are 99 courses I haven't seen. (I guess that leaves 290 I have seen.) So, please don't add to the ballot, because I really don't think there could be 100 courses worthy of the top 100 that I've never gone to look at."
-True, but there may be courses you have seen (especially in the US and UK) that are not yet on this ballot. I'd like to make sure these courses get consideration. Hopefully we can keep the number of nominated courses to a minimum.
Anthony, I suggest you look at the previous thread if you are interested in our discussion on keeping voters honest. Your idea is an interesting one and perhaps could be a future project (probably with fewer courses...). However, I would argue that your method is not immune, as a rater who would give Augusta National a 1 would probably purposely rank it below inferior courses to drive down its ranking.
I will be updating the nomination this evening.