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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!cbnewsm!benw
- From: benw@cbnewsm.cb.att.com (bennett.weber)
- Subject: Re: PIRACY v2.00
- Organization: AT&T
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 22:14:30 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.221430.13139@cbnewsm.cb.att.com>
- References: <1992Nov14.162156.12506@dartvax.dartmouth.edu> <1992Nov19.193309.16049@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- Lines: 71
-
- In article <1992Nov19.193309.16049@hubcap.clemson.edu> jmauric@eng.clemson.edu writes:
- >
- >they all have over priced software and deserve to lose.
- If they can't sell'em, yeah, they will lose. But prices on software
- from the big boys has taken a nosedive recently...have you checked lately?
-
- > is a spreadsheet
- >really worth $500?
-
- Yes, if that's the value to you. It's a marketroid cliche, but customers
- buy solutions, not software. I had a customer once offer $10,000 to
- buy a program that would be 100 lines of UNIX shell. Seems outlandish
- to you and me, but for him it solved a problem that cost a lot more to
- leave unresolved. A spreadsheet's worth $500 if you get $500 or more
- worth of use out of it. If you dust it off and boot it up once a year, no.
-
- >and considering its been worked on since 1970?
- >well lets see... 1992 - 1970.. 22 years.... ridiculous upgrade costs...
- >of say $50 each year... thats $1100 that youve given then in just upgrade
- >costs... not to mention the addition of the original cost which brings us
- >to a grand total of $1550!
-
- On the other hand, that company has had people working to do the upgrades
- (and docs, and testing, and requirements, and marketing and distribution,
- support, etc.etc.etc) for those years, too. Hey, the upgrade cost may or may
- not be high, but let's not oversimplify here! BTW, 1970 seems a bit early!
-
- > and all that for a spreadsheet??!!!!!! are you
- >crazy? i had to write a spreadsheet for a computer class 3 years ago. it
- >wasnt fancy, but i gotta yell ya... $1550 for it is just a little far.
-
- Well, writing a class project 3 years ago certainly qualifies you
- to bash the computer industry. Do you think any of the large popular
- software packages are done by one person? Do you seriously think the
- time and effort spent on your spreadsheet was even one thousandth of
- what is spent on a polished commercial product? Do you have the
- slightest idea what a software life cycle entails?
-
- >Plus if everyone was convinced that paying $500 for software and not pirating
- >was an ok idea i dont think shareware and freeware would have come along.
- >if it wasnt for the pirates, i dont think shareware would have come along.
- >support shareware and freeware. its the future. its time to tell the
- >commercial companies where to go.
-
- But keep in mind that one of the reasons for shareware was that the
- small-time developer simply didn't have the huge amounts of money
- the big companies need and use to sell software through normal channels.
- And, of course, that cost is absorbed into the software price.
-
-
- >
- >---
- >
- > --John
- >
- >============================================================================
- >Reply to JMAURIC@ENG.CLEMSON.EDU | 300 Rippleview Dr.
- >Phone: 803-653-3893 | Clemson, SC 29631
- >============================================================================
- >
-
- Ben Weber
-
- AT&T Network Systems
- @ Bell Labs
- Middletown, NJ
-
-
- --------------------------------
- Not speaking for AT&T
- --------------------------------
-