reinventing the Wheel
Having done a ton of research in my day (4 filing cabinets full of bugle stuff, 100Gb of images and music files, a bugle collection, 6 published manuals, 10 tapes, 8 CD's and LOTS of Civil War books, magazines, diaries)....here's my spin on this.
Come up with more compendiums, bibliographies, searchable articles, FAQ's, blogs. Online. When they ask the question for the 1,000th time.....point them to the online data.
And quit your bitchin'.
This is 2004. Electronics, on demand technology, Google, TeraBytes of data were not conceived of back in our college days, WWW, email, TelNet, Gopher, IRCL. None of us were trained in how to do internet based research. Let alone research.
If we know about tin bullseye canteens with beeswax lining.....why go out and research it Again and Again and Again and.....What a Frickin' waste of time, research effort, and human minds.
Publish your findings and go onto something else. Yes Olive oil is sweet oil is used for waterproofing hot gun barrels that were recently swished out with Boiling (not hot, but Boiling) hot water.
Get past the gear.
Stop reinventing the wheel.
Find answers, publish them.
and then move on.
We don't need to keep re-researching the already researched research, do we???
Reading an original diary, letter or a stack of papers from the bowels of a library / historical museum / governmental archives is research..... reading someone's research (a book, magazine, an article, a posting) is learning, not research.
Everyone wants fast answer's, and accurate. What kind of weapon did the 2nd Wisconsin Infantry have? When? What quantities. From which depot. Seems to me someone up hear may have already researched the question....and knows the answers (Madeus article in Gaff's Book always good for this)....
So answer the question, point him in the right direction, or move on to a topic you'd like to discuss.
I'm not in this hobby to find out what kind of button's were used by the 15th Indiana in 1863.....but I'll bet someone is....so let 'em.
Don't reinvent the wheel, what a waste of time.....you'll end up like the Akron Ohio tire companies.....
RJ Samp
Having done a ton of research in my day (4 filing cabinets full of bugle stuff, 100Gb of images and music files, a bugle collection, 6 published manuals, 10 tapes, 8 CD's and LOTS of Civil War books, magazines, diaries)....here's my spin on this.
Come up with more compendiums, bibliographies, searchable articles, FAQ's, blogs. Online. When they ask the question for the 1,000th time.....point them to the online data.
And quit your bitchin'.
This is 2004. Electronics, on demand technology, Google, TeraBytes of data were not conceived of back in our college days, WWW, email, TelNet, Gopher, IRCL. None of us were trained in how to do internet based research. Let alone research.
If we know about tin bullseye canteens with beeswax lining.....why go out and research it Again and Again and Again and.....What a Frickin' waste of time, research effort, and human minds.
Publish your findings and go onto something else. Yes Olive oil is sweet oil is used for waterproofing hot gun barrels that were recently swished out with Boiling (not hot, but Boiling) hot water.
Get past the gear.
Stop reinventing the wheel.
Find answers, publish them.
and then move on.
We don't need to keep re-researching the already researched research, do we???
Reading an original diary, letter or a stack of papers from the bowels of a library / historical museum / governmental archives is research..... reading someone's research (a book, magazine, an article, a posting) is learning, not research.
Everyone wants fast answer's, and accurate. What kind of weapon did the 2nd Wisconsin Infantry have? When? What quantities. From which depot. Seems to me someone up hear may have already researched the question....and knows the answers (Madeus article in Gaff's Book always good for this)....
So answer the question, point him in the right direction, or move on to a topic you'd like to discuss.
I'm not in this hobby to find out what kind of button's were used by the 15th Indiana in 1863.....but I'll bet someone is....so let 'em.
Don't reinvent the wheel, what a waste of time.....you'll end up like the Akron Ohio tire companies.....
RJ Samp
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