Hello,
What I have to say comes off the wing, and isn't highly organized, but at that risk...
A. In the Information Age, unfortunately "information" is not as precious as it once was. Preciousness, rarity, scarcity, discovery and so forth are so easily transacted and so quickly processed...and so easily disposed, that its charm evaporates much more quickly than any one piece of information's particular worth. At one time, this site was one of the few (if not only) where a classic course's dossier (as it were) could be examined. Not so now. True in so many fields, not just golf
B. In the Information age, the subject information is nearly always non- tactile, not able to be held in the hand. I'm fairly certain few print out threads they like and review them in their chair or at a desk or while eating a meal. It can be dismissed so quickly. This is one of many reasons when Tom Doak was polling us for delivery methods of his updated CG, I suggested that no matter what other methods were considered, that he went with a big ultra-fabulous huge coffee table book with all the trimmings. To me, this will last in the owners collection in near perpetuity - which is deserved considering the worth of its content
C. Consider photography, specifically digital photography...and not just as it relates to Golf pictures. I often think of the difference between picture taking from 19th century daguerreotypes to just 20 years ago. And when I do, I think to myself, where are all the pictures going?...I never see any home possessing, and rarely participate in the activity of looking through, albums any more. I think, what is happening to all these pictures people are taking?... Of families, of occasions, of memorable moments, of Niagara Falls and so forth...I recently asked my friend if the photos of my one and only godchild's (his daughter) christening luncheon could be accessed, it was such a fun day etc. He was completely clueless...he thought they may be on a disc but he also feared they were on a hard drive he long ago dispensed with. It was just 8 years ago. Just today, I met with a super about any photos he might have about historical course work regarding the course for which I'm doing a club history. Indeed he had them all, thousands in fact, but they are right there on a computer and to look at them, linger an pause on them to discuss this or that was just about impossible. the sheer number of file folders and the hundreds of pictures within each made it nearly impossible to actually cull through them, once he found the file, which took some time given his enormous number of files.
D. (really tangential, but about preciousness not available in the Information age) I'm an ardent fan of the Beatles and their music, and a significant thesis I hold about why their music and reputation has endured (beyond its quality and innovation) is that after Aug 29, 1966...no one saw them anymore. Yes, certainly, the new and unprecedented music that issued from EMI studios from Strawberry Fields/Penny Lane recordings (the beginning of what became the Sgt. Pepper "sessions") until "Let it Be" was released, was the authentic vehicle of their popularity, but the cultural mystique and rabid cultural interpretation was really created by the co-fact that one could not access them anymore. The only manner you knew they existed was the music... scant interviews, no performances...things like Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds stood for LSD, Paul is dead (which had oxygen in many items of their product) all lent them a mystical, supra-human presence because there was a vacuum of their actual, physical presence in the world. I would go so far to say that Manson could've never deluded his followers into their heinous crimes if the Beatles were playing concerts surrounding the catalog of the White Album and were giving interviews about the music and such. The Beatles' scarcity after they stopped touring (itself an act done because they believed their music was itself becoming disposable inside Beatlemania) lent them a cultural presence that beatified their import beyond normal realms.
As I said I'm writing this on the wing and have now drifted far from the concerns of the thread, but my main point is that besides...
1. exhausting GCA material
2. having flimsy, or OT, or trivial contributions
3. or "Ran's perfect timing" now imperfect
4. or "industry types and raters" governing their tongues to maintain their station
5. or having slates of posts that range into personal attack
this is the dark side of the Information age on an Information age platform...we are becoming inured to the fact that no one or nothing is above being disposable as was once a wonder, can easily be turned into a tedium. Unfortunately, this true of much in the Machine age...mankind is a destroyer, very near the Moloch of lore (and Ginsburg's poem). who but us could conquer flight and make it stink as commercial air travel? Who else but humanity can solve the atom and blow up thousands within a few decades of its knowledge? who but us can uncover the root of organic disease and turn into controversial health care?
One last point...
in the realm of GCA and this site, another big problem is that I know I will never see or experience or enjoy so many of the individual courses that the DG brings up. From Royal Melbourne to the "Best Course in Your City," chances are that I'm not going to get there or even see it on TV to experience it 2-Dimensionally, so while I respect any individual's desire and amusement to post it and other's interest to look at it, I find it hard to engage meaningfully...but that's just me.
cheers
vk