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#21
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On 07/04/2011 01:05, wrote:
I am very confused after finding a forum "badged" as the "television magazine". http://www.television-magazine-forum.co.uk Clever, and good for them. This is the way forward to that printed magazine, use the model of web 2.0 and gather the users thoughts to bolster the distribution of information. Of course, it's goodbye to some quarters of paid print journalism. Youtube - The Machine is Us/ing Us (Final Version) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLlGopyXT_g Of course we still have usenet here, and repair information is disseminated on sci.electronics.repair & occasionally uk.d-i.y without too much problems, if ye have a good kill filter and/or patience. And of course, the other open forums out on the webs. I note that on this television magazine forum there is a hobbyist category for validation purposes to join their "closed shop". What they probably don't want is facebook like posts - "I think it's the on/off switch, my friend Mabel had that problem and it cost £70 to fix. Can I do it for free?" If anyone is already a member of this forum, could they perhaps point the owner to make a comment here? Maybe they should entertain the idea of a geek lurker visitor access, or add a separate subforum in the way that usenet sci.electronics is split into .design and .basics categories (for instance). However, while usenet (and google) are still here, I'm not over there just yet. -- Adrian C |
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#22
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In message on Sun, 10 Apr 2011 13:39:30 +0100
Adrian C wrote: If anyone is already a member of this forum, could they perhaps point the owner to make a comment here? Done! -- Terry |
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#23
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Interesting comments about my forum Carl, shame you didn't contact me
through the forum with any issues you might have. The forum was set up in memory of the original Television Magazine and has nothing to do with the publishers of that magazine and certainly has no links whatsoever to Technology at Home or the last ditch effort to start Television Magazine again. It is a Trade Only forum hence the questions you need to answer when filling out the registration form. I believe it is important not to give consumers access to trade information. I have a number of Television Magazine former contributors on-board the forum including Don Bullock, Peter Dolman & Fawzi Ibrahim. Bill Wright has also recently joined the forum. There are a number of sections to the forum including a paid for section where service manuals and technical data is stored. I have arranged many forum discounts for members on things from liability insurance to electronics test gear. I also write tech bulletins and review equipment for members. There is a repair tips database and a whole lot more. I am unsure why you think you can't join as it clearly states that we accept registrations from professionals to skilled hobbyists and ex engineers etc. Brown Goods Bodgers, narrow minded attitude, stuff you..... Nice comments, try making them to me next time and perhaps I can explain what you have misunderstood. regards Trevor |
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#24
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On Apr 7, 9:51*pm, Terry Casey wrote:
In message on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 01:05:41 +0100 wrote: I am very confused after finding a forum "badged" as the "television magazine". After subscribing to the poper mag for many years (and working in the industry for DER, then self), and when it was tech at home then back to whatever etc, the forum deems I am not worthy to be a member? I say, stuff you! I moved on to servicing other fields of electronic equipment, making a very good living from it too now. The old "keep it to yourself" brown goods bodgers get all they deserve with this narrow minded attitude. I only wanted to join to see Don B's service rants again. Funny, I thought that, if they let me join (which they did) anybody could! It is more aimed at the those currently 'in the trade' than those of us that used to be. Perhaps they've raised the bar? I know the site has been revamped recently, perhaps free registration is no longer available? -- Terry Registration is still free but I am trying to keep it trade only. regards Trevor |
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#25
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wrote in message ... Interesting comments about my forum Carl, shame you didn't contact me through the forum with any issues you might have. The forum was set up in memory of the original Television Magazine and has nothing to do with the publishers of that magazine and certainly has no links whatsoever to Technology at Home or the last ditch effort to start Television Magazine again. It is a Trade Only forum hence the questions you need to answer when filling out the registration form. I believe it is important not to give consumers access to trade information. I have a number of Television Magazine former contributors on-board the forum including Don Bullock, Peter Dolman & Fawzi Ibrahim. Bill Wright has also recently joined the forum. As a former regular reader and contributor to Television, do I qualify? Problem is in this increasingly throw away age and repair jobs few & far between, I can only afford the free registration option. |
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#26
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On Apr 10, 3:27*pm, "Ian Field"
wrote: wrote in message ... Interesting comments about my forum Carl, shame you didn't contact me through the forum with any issues you might have. The forum was set up in memory of the original Television Magazine and has nothing to do with the publishers of that magazine and certainly has no links whatsoever to Technology at Home or the last ditch effort to start Television Magazine again. It is a Trade Only forum hence the questions you need to answer when filling *out the registration form. I believe it is important not to give consumers access to trade information. I have a number of Television Magazine former contributors on-board the forum including Don Bullock, Peter Dolman & Fawzi Ibrahim. Bill Wright has also recently joined the forum. As a former regular reader and contributor to Television, do I qualify? Problem is in this increasingly throw away age and repair jobs few & far between, I can only afford the free registration option. Hi If you are or were in the trade then of course you can register for free. Only working engineers need access to the paid for section. We also have a firmware jig loan scheme that is a paid for section, again, useful for working engineers only.... All other section are entirely free.... I just need some sort of trade or ex trade information. IF you must be anonymous on the forum I can make special arrangements for you!!! I have already done this for some members who work for certain companies. At the end of the day the forum is there for chat and help for anyone associated with the consumer electronics trade. Just take a peek at www.television-magazine-forum.co.uk And yes, the site went through a major revamp last December and is now run on the most professional software available. vBulletin allows some great features, to many to note here. I can be contacted at any time on this email address if you have any queries. I am always looking for past contributors and would like to re-publish as many old articles as possible. regards Trevor |
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#27
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On Sunday, April 10th, 2011 at 06:48:41h -0700, Trevor wrote:
I believe it is important *not* to give consumers access to trade information. Keep them in the dark and treat them like mushrooms. |
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#28
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"J G Miller" wrote in message ... On Sunday, April 10th, 2011 at 06:48:41h -0700, Trevor wrote: I believe it is important *not* to give consumers access to trade information. Keep them in the dark and treat them like mushrooms. The caption is: "I am a mushroom - they keep me in the dark and feed me bull****". |
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#29
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#30
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Trevor wrote:
Thanks very much Bill. That's quite all right. No problem. So to summarise, you think we should give out trade information like how to enter the service mode or how to change the caps in your Samsung lcd do you?? This will be someone else you're talking to now, I expect? To be honest, I think 'trade secrets' are a thing of the past. We live in the information age. Many years ago it might have been possible to protect a trade by keeping information secret, but nowadays it isn't possible and more important it isn't necessary. Joe Bloggs doesn't ask you to fix his telly because he doesn't know which capacitor to replace, it's because even if he did know he wouldn't have a soldering station, the physical skills, or most importantly the time to do it. "Can't be arsed" is the expression in vogue. The fact is, people these days are happy to buy in skills as and when needed. The reason is that skills of the brown goods type are now cheap. Nasty news guys, but Joe Bloggs thinks "OK, this guy will charge me £60 to fix the telly. Hypothetically I could look on the net and find out how to do it myself, buy in the bits and bobs, the soldering iron, the test gear, and it would take me a total of three hours plus £5 on bits. But I earn £25 per hour. So I'll let the guy do it. I'm more short of time than I am of money. From being a respected figure in the community with a large estate car and the magical ability to restore light (or at least width or height) the TV engineer is now relegated to being a member of a scavenging trade, picking up the detritus left by the poorest members of society. Reason being that everyone else buys new if the three year old set goes tits up. Only the very desperate consider a repair. Nowadays we throw out electronic items not because they are broken but because something slightly better has appeared on the market. The brown good repair trade is utterly ****ed, and will stay that way as long as China keeps throwing cheap goods at us. If the purchase price of an item is high enough repair becomes viable, but diagnosis and test equipment is far more important than trade secrets. Take your car to the garage and they connect it to a computer, load some very expensive software, and find out things the DIY man could never come close to. In the aerial trade there's one simple factor that keeps the trade in existence, and it ain't the trade secret of knowing which way to point the bloody thing: it's the fear of climbing on the roof. There are no aerial riggers in the tropical jungle, or on the west side of Ireland, where the aerials just go on poles in the garden. Bill |
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