+1 to Andrea and Kalia.
I like the idea of an online repository with notes/comments. It is
possible to set up a wiki so that people can upload a dance and that only
comments to the dance can be made by others/edited.
I understand not wanting to have Yelp-like problems with phony reviews and
grudge-fests, but I think that is something that can be maintained via
requiring CDSS membership and a non-anonymous log in/commenting mechanism.
Les
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 12:44 PM, Kalia Kliban <kalia(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote:
On 12/11/2013 3:51 AM, Perry Shafran wrote:
I'm trying to figure out why having a
database of dances would detract
from the folk process. Isn't the folk process considered the handing down
of material from person to person, generation to generation? And should
that not also include the way that material is handed down? I think that a
database of dances is extremely helpful to the evolution of the folk
process. When the web evolved, people put their dances on the web for all
to see, use, adapt. Now we have the cloud, and callers can share their
dances using a cloud-based database. Considering that this is what was
highly requested on the survey, I think that we need to find ways to create
this repository of dances that also respects the rights of the
choreographers who write them.
True enough, but hearing the experience of others with those dances can be
really helpful. Just like on a recipe site, reading the comments can make
a world of difference. If a preponderance of the commenters say "the dough
was really sticky when freshly mixed, but a few minutes in the fridge made
it perfectly easy to handle," or "letting the dancers who are out at the
ends know not to cross over until _after_ the partner dosido solved the end
effect problem," that would be really useful information to have. I'm all
in favor of putting the dances up in original form, but followup user
commentary is also incredibly helpful.
Kalia
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers(a)sharedweight.net
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers