home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!joebloe!joseph
- From: joseph@joebloe.maple-shade.nj.us (Joseph Nathan Hall)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.programmer
- Subject: Re: Why the Piracy? Here's why...
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 93 23:03:46 EDT
- Organization: 5 Sigma Software
- Message-ID: <01050166.oevqi2@joebloe.maple-shade.nj.us>
- Reply-To: joseph@joebloe.maple-shade.nj.us
- X-Mailer: uAccess - Macintosh Release: 1.5v5
- Lines: 56
-
-
- In article <D2150035.o9jc19@outpost.SF-Bay.org> (comp.sys.mac.programmer), peirce@outpost.SF-Bay.org (Michael Peirce) writes:
- )
- ) In article <tal691.727611521@huxley> (comp.sys.mac.programmer), tal691@huxley.anu.edu.au (Tonio Loewald) writes:
- ) >
- ) > Look, musicians get royalties on their CDs, but not on illegal recordings
- ) > of their CDs.
- )
- ) Actually I believe they do. There is some sort of surtax levied on
- ) blank cassettes that flows into ASCAP(?) to compensate the artists.
-
- Did that actually get passed? <sigh> Oh, well, at least most of
- what I buy these days is DATs.
-
- ) This compensates them for people making personal recordings of CDs
- ) onto cassettes. Bootleg tapes are another animal all together.
-
- On the other hand, I use them almost exclusively for duplicating my
- copyrighted, unpublished music. Where do *I* sign up for $$$ from
- my helpful government? I'm a productive, healthy, law-abiding taxpaying
- citizen, and ....
-
- Anyway, getting back to the point, what I don't like is the fact that
- software costs are rarely closely tied to utility. If X small company
- buys a copy of, say, Microsoft Mail's $5000 SMTP Gateway, which is
- necessary if it is going to gateway *any* quantity of email through
- a UNIX box, it pays the same as some large company with 100, or 1000
- nodes of MS Mail that keep the gateway machine cranking day and night.
- It pays the same per node of FrameMaker that it uses only occasionally
- as a company with 100 fully utilized floating license nodes does.
- Frankly it seems to me that the only sensible and affordable policy
- for small businesses is piracy. Mind you, I find that revolting.
- But who to blame?
-
- Software vendors are just not tuned in yet.
-
- It almost happened back in the 80s with Borland. Certainly they did
- have a profound effect on some markets. There are very few >$500
- micro development platforms left these days (except for you-know-what).
- It's too bad that they aren't all $100. I'm sure that Phillippe could
- still afford his room full of synthesizers even if that WERE the case
- now. (Not to be sarcastic. He seems like quite an interesting fellow.)
-
- What's a node of NFS worth, really? More like $50 than $200-$400,
- IMHO. Gross margins would still be 60-90%+. I think some companies
- that manufacture actual *stuff* would be happy with that.
-
- Less expensive software with innovative, reasonable pricing *will* be a
- reality in the coming years. What I want to watch is the suffering
- of the workstation software vendors. Now, THAT will be something!
-
- ================O Fortuna, velut Luna, statu variabilis================
- uunet!joebloe!joseph (609) 273-8200 day joseph%joebloe@uunet.uu.net
- 2102 Ryan's Run East Rt 38 & 41 Maple Shade NJ 08052
- Copyright 1993 by Joseph N. Hall. Permission granted to copy and
- redistribute freely over USENET and by email. Commercial use prohibited.
-