Agreed. The ? vintage camera shows do it the same way. ?Ed#
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-------- Original message --------
From: Evan Koblentz <cctalk at snarc.net>
Date: 4/18/2016  11:52 AM  (GMT-08:00)
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at
classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: Vintage Computer Festivals???
 Still, calling a hobbyist who
 sells some of his creations a vendor is a dubious distinction, in my
 opinion, since no one is making much money on these things, it's just a
 service for fellow enthusiasts. All of the other shows I attend (like
 the upcoming CocoFEST!) make no distinction. 
We have a good reason for doing this.
Events that mix sales/exhibits together, without making distinctions
 from booth to booth, tend to become flea/swap-type
events. That's fine  
for those of us IN the hobby, but these events will only
ever shrink,
not grow, as the audience/collectors get older.
Our goal at VCF is to produce awesome events that show vintage computing
to people * beyond * hobby insiders.
When people who have casual interest attend a VCF, they're not going to
come back if the room is a big confusing mix of exhibits and stuff for
sale. These people -- a massive audience vs. the few of us active
collectors -- aren't attending to find memory for their Banana 3000.
They're attending to be wowed.