Blue Bear Sound said:
if a licensing body were made up of the likes of Bob katz, Al Schmidt, George Massenburg, Ed Cherney, and Frank Fillipetti - they wouldn't be able to call themselves "professional engineers" because they would not be able to demonstrate suitable skills or knowledge to such a group.
And just how is one supposed to demonstrate such knowledge?
Will one be forced to go through some training course that we have to pay for to become certified, with the money going solely to the propigation of the governing body?
Will they accredit other courses so that the only way to get certified is by giving thousands of dollars to Full Sail?
Will it simply be taking a written test that they devise, in which case one need only study a book for a couple of weeks to pass it without ever having even sat in front of a mixer?
Will we have to provide pictures and receipts of what kind of gear we have to prove that we're not some hack with an SM57 and a SoundBlaster? And if so, where do they draw the line? Is a Mackie 1604 not good enough but a Mackie 32.8 is?
Will one be forced to have Pro Tools capability in house to have Pro Tools certification? Will lack of Pro Tools experience make them an amateur?
Will one have to demonstrate that they are a salaried engineer or provide copies of their business tax returns to prove that they are a working professional before they get accredited? And if so, when they lose their job or hit a dry spell, do they then lose their certification like the schmucks in SAG?
How long before they want us to pay dues?
If I had a dollar for every MCSE (Microsoft Certified Software Engineer) who couldn't write a professional chunk of code or teach someone else how to if their life depended on it, I'd be able to buy lunch for everybody in this thread.
And as for the certifiers; power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.
I'm sorry, but my personal opinion is the idea of an "official certification body" is just a way to create whole new set of problems in an effort to get rid of the current set of problems. And it still won't get rid of the current problems. There will still be plenty of scheisters out there on one end and suckers on the other.
And what makes it worse is that the current set of problems does not affect me or any of my clients, but the new set of problems would. It would be a major pain in the ass and a cost to me in time and money if I chose to participate, and a drag on my merchandisability if I didn't. Either way it would wind up costing both me and my customer base.
Count me out.
G.