"TEP
I'm talking about posting documents, articles, reports, etc. (like most of do), and if that is not possible at least direct quotes. You have a tendencey of making broad statements about material you claim to have seen, and when asked about specifics you often get very defensive."
Tom MacWood:
Thank you; I consider that to be a very direct and specific answer to my question to you today, and I see no reason henceforth to ask it again. Your answer is clear and specific, and if need be in the future I will know where to find it and quote it.
There is a good reason I don't post documents, articles, reports, etc. (like most do) on this website-----eg I don't know how to do it!
I've got close to 40,000 posts on this website going all the way back to 1999 and not a single one of them has ever had an actual copy of anything posted on it.
There is no particular reason I can think of why I've never known how to include copies of material in my posts on this website; it's just the way some people are I guess----sometimes it seems to have something to do with people who are older and didn't come up in the computer age. But even though you may not realize it or appreciate it well enough, there were numerous really impressive historical researcher/analysts before the age of computers!
But I can cut and paste relevent material on here and when that is sometimes not possible for various reasons I just have to go through the laborious process of typing the whole thing out myself on a WORD processer and then cutting and pasting it on here. Obviously I can't do that with any non-text material such as photos, drawings etc.
But if you, for some odd reason, think that understanding how to post actual copies of historical architectural material on this website is what is required of a really good architectural researcher/analyst or is in some way a prerequisite for being a really good architectural researcher/analyst, I would have to strenuously disagree with you. And I should add that it has certainly occured to me, and for years, that you actually may think that or want others on here to think that.
Prehaps one of the finest golf architectural researcher/analyst/historians I have ever known is a much older man who does not even have a computer or know how to use one. As he always has, he uses a 1947 Underwood typewriter to type his products and he does his research the old fashioned way----actually physically going to the subject clubs and courses and anywhere else he needs to go for source material.
There is more to talk about regarding posting SOME material on this website and I'll get into that a bit later on another post.
As to your second sentence in your last post I'll get into that later too.
Again, thanks for your direct and clear answer to my question to you this morning. I feel your answer alone brings up a number of extremely important and even fundamental issues on this website which I believe need to be discussed by all of us and in detail.