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![]() | It is requested that one or more audio files of a musical instrument or component be uploaded to Wikimedia Commons and included in this article to improve its quality by demonstrating the way it sounds or alters sound. Please see Wikipedia:Requested recordings for more on this request. |
As the inventor of the musical tubes known as Boomwhackers, as documented in the patent associated with them (presently not referenced in the article), and the one that coined the Boomwhackers name and registered the name as a trademark, I have noted a number of inaccuracies and speculative statements in the article and a general lack of information. I am beginning to edit and upgrade the content of the article accordingly, which has generally been noted for lack of content and low quality in general. I have not previously contributed or edited anything on Wikipedia so I have been researching the guidelines about doing so and will do my best to incorporate those guidelines in my edits. I'm particularly aware of the policy against the use of Original Research, which certainly limits my ability to expand the content of the article as much as I would otherwise could and would like to do, but it is my intent to adhere to that guideline by utilizing published articles. Not all of the articles I will cite are available online, in fact few if any are. However, they will be public citations and I have physical copies in my possession in many cases and photocopied versions or web references to such publications in other cases. I'd like to make clear that I also no longer have any monetary interest in the promotion or sale of the product. I look forward to dialoging with anyone that has any issue with or question about any of my edits. Thank you. Craigramsell ( talk) 03:31, 24 July 2015 (UTC)
{{reply to|paul2520}}
). Offline sources are allowed, but yes, it would be great to get photocopies and post them somewhere.Hi,
Using a score software, I discovered a plugin for colorising notes with the “Boomwhacker color convention”, so, I went to this page and the only thing that is said about colors it that it's color coded but nothing more is explained. Though, looking at some website linked, I see that the color used are the Rainbow colors beginning from red for C, orange for D and so on until violet for B.
I wonder why it's not explained, though, even if it's obvious, sources are certainly needed to write about that, so, I suggest to find such sources to add this information to the article.
Bye.
![]() | This article was nominated for deletion on 8 January 2013 (UTC). The result of the discussion was keep. |
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
![]() | It is requested that one or more audio files of a musical instrument or component be uploaded to Wikimedia Commons and included in this article to improve its quality by demonstrating the way it sounds or alters sound. Please see Wikipedia:Requested recordings for more on this request. |
As the inventor of the musical tubes known as Boomwhackers, as documented in the patent associated with them (presently not referenced in the article), and the one that coined the Boomwhackers name and registered the name as a trademark, I have noted a number of inaccuracies and speculative statements in the article and a general lack of information. I am beginning to edit and upgrade the content of the article accordingly, which has generally been noted for lack of content and low quality in general. I have not previously contributed or edited anything on Wikipedia so I have been researching the guidelines about doing so and will do my best to incorporate those guidelines in my edits. I'm particularly aware of the policy against the use of Original Research, which certainly limits my ability to expand the content of the article as much as I would otherwise could and would like to do, but it is my intent to adhere to that guideline by utilizing published articles. Not all of the articles I will cite are available online, in fact few if any are. However, they will be public citations and I have physical copies in my possession in many cases and photocopied versions or web references to such publications in other cases. I'd like to make clear that I also no longer have any monetary interest in the promotion or sale of the product. I look forward to dialoging with anyone that has any issue with or question about any of my edits. Thank you. Craigramsell ( talk) 03:31, 24 July 2015 (UTC)
{{reply to|paul2520}}
). Offline sources are allowed, but yes, it would be great to get photocopies and post them somewhere.Hi,
Using a score software, I discovered a plugin for colorising notes with the “Boomwhacker color convention”, so, I went to this page and the only thing that is said about colors it that it's color coded but nothing more is explained. Though, looking at some website linked, I see that the color used are the Rainbow colors beginning from red for C, orange for D and so on until violet for B.
I wonder why it's not explained, though, even if it's obvious, sources are certainly needed to write about that, so, I suggest to find such sources to add this information to the article.
Bye.