[ARC5] Museum website

Fuqua, Bill L wlfuqu00 at uky.edu
Sun Mar 25 22:05:01 EDT 2018


  You know, if you have something very rare a museum will buy it from you at a fair price.


73

Bill wa4lav




________________________________
From: arc5-bounces at mailman.qth.net <arc5-bounces at mailman.qth.net> on behalf of cfb at themuseums.org <cfb at themuseums.org>
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2018 3:37 PM
To: arc5 at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [ARC5] Museum website


See below





From: J Mcvey [mailto:ac2eu at yahoo.com]
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2018 12:07 PM
To: arc5 at mailman.qth.net<mailto:arc5 at mailman.qth.net>; cfb at themuseums.org<mailto:cfb at themuseums.org>
Subject: Re: [ARC5] Museum website



There are other real museums with similar URLs.



1) Museums:

Not to put too fine a point on it, while there are a few formal museums worldwide that have limited vacuum tube assets, there is no other formal museum dedicated to vacuum tubes.

Example: the Smithsonian has no vacuum tube exhibit.

Example: The Antique Wireless Association has a tiny vacuum tube exhibit. One would have thought otherwise, since tubes drive antique wireless radios.

Example: the British Museum has no vacuum tube exhibit.

Etc., etc.

More important, the Smithsonian does not know of any other formal museum dedicated to vacuum tubes. The Smithsonian has reviewed our Museum, confirmed that there is no other formal museum dedicated to vacuum tubes, and has granted us the rare privilege of applying for Smithsonian affiliation. They are particularly impressed with the extensive organizational policies, which they say they rarely see, even in very well-established museum organizations.

And other organizations such as the Tube Collectors Association do not know of any other formal museum dedicated to vacuum tubes.

If you know of another formal museum organization dedicated to vacuum tubes, let us know immediately.



2) Websites:

As to various websites, in general there are two types of websites in the general arena of vacuum tubes:

a) There are websites with museum-oriented words but in fact are not museums but rather sales operations.

b) There are a number of websites built by people, many by very good people with the passions to assemble and present good vacuum tube data and information. Again, none are a formal museum dedicated to vacuum tubes. One of the tasks ahead is to set up the links section of the Vacuum Tube Body of Knowledge with approved links to all organizations with valid vacuum tube data and information. Our Museum will not strive to have every tube, every tube-based gear, etc., in our collection, and will include images along with those links, acting as the central knowledge portal for anyone and everyone to access vacuum tube knowledge, wherever that knowledge may be.



Why do the museums mentioned on your site need YOU?

A very strange question… Is it possible for any organization to not have a founder? Did you read the About?: http://themuseums.org/about/



Don't they do their own own fund raising?

Again, a very strange question… Of course we do our own fund raising. Did you read the Ideal Funding Strategies?: http://themuseums.org/ideal-funding-strategies/



As I understand your site , you maintain no museum yourself.

If you do , where is it and where are the photos of it?

I am not sure if you read the history, which is articulated in several sections of the website. For example, on http://themuseums.org/international-vacuum-tube-museum/ you can see where we talk about losing our old Gallery in Lakewood Colorado.

I will post photos of the old Gallery.

We are currently working on getting a large building donated.

We maintain a proper 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization qualified under Federal law as a formal museum.



So what's the deal?

Again, a strange question… or at the least, entirely too open-ended to attempt an answer.



In all candor, your questions and statements seem quite off the cuff, without taking the time to read the appropriate sections on the website.



However, if the website does not adequately answer every possible question, it is because it is impossible to anticipate every possible question, especially strange questions,  especially strange questions that are already addressed in the relevant sections on the website.



All this being said, email questions directly to cfb at themuseums.org<mailto:cfb at themuseums.org> and I will build a new FAQ to try to appease even the strangest questions.





On Sunday, March 25, 2018, 1:52:54 PM EDT, cfb at themuseums.org<mailto:cfb at themuseums.org> <cfb at themuseums.org<mailto:cfb at themuseums.org>> wrote:





There seems to have been some difficulties for 2 people in the Forum, possibly 3, accessing the current Museum website. I spent a lot of time this weekend with the new ISP I had to bring on, and we went through all the servers, software, systems, etc., and everything seems to be working correctly. If anyone is interested, over the past 2+ years I had to switch the Museum from an extremely bad ISP to the new ISP, also resulting in going through 3 domain changes, building 3 different website systems… a ridiculous amount of work, all while dealing with significant health issues and an extremely tiny budget for the Museum. The current website is a pale reflection of what it will become. Building a formal museum organization is far more difficult than you can imagine, unless you have been there. I look forward to any constructive and helpful feedback. Charles

______________________________________________________________
ARC5 mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/arc5
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:ARC5 at mailman.qth.net<mailto:ARC5 at mailman.qth.net>

This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.qth.net/pipermail/arc5/attachments/20180326/8ff9151e/attachment.html>


More information about the ARC5 mailing list