User talk:Ralph Morris/Tyco
Please advise corrections necessary to remove PROD and publish this article. A hyperlink was included to another article verifying company name and historical details. The company is no longer active but of some historical significance in the music world.
Help me. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ralph Morris (talk • contribs) 23:48, 9 February 2010 (UTC)
I am very disappointed that I was offered no editorial help in presenting this page, other than notification that it was deemed "not notable" by one reviewer. I would expect of a peer-reviewed journal that at least three reviewers would weigh in on that determination before a submission is deleted.
When a submission of a technical nature is deemed "not notable" by one reviewer, that person may be totally unqualified to pass such judgment, and further review should be required before the execution is carried out.
There are four other references to this subject already published in Wikipedia, and my submission was an effort to provide a base for these references, a short history of the company which developed the first studio-quality concert sound system, as well as the most powerful concert sound system ever assembled. My submission included links to published articles verifying the facts presented. Those facts alone are quite notable to anyone with knowledge or interest in the subject, which was quite notable to an entire generation during the 1960s and 1970s. That this unique achievement could be deemed "not notable" by one reviewer and deleted is not only draconian, it doesn't speak well for the organization that permits it.
I'll be inclined to withhold any further submissions until this policy has been changed, and I'll avoid selecting Wikipedia from search-engine results.
New contributors should be encouraged and assisted, rather than put off by petty reviewers who have no understanding or appreciation of the subject.
Ralph Morris (talk) 06:17, 19 February 2010 (UTC) Ralph Morris