Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: Johnbear007
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: gogeeta13
Originally posted by: UberDave
i'll start purchasing an OS from Microsoft once they reduce their prices. To me it should be like $60 compared to the $150+ they've been charging.... and thats being generous.
Speaking of which, The Microsoft office is soooo expensive I have to choose from either 97 pro, which only now is affordable or Corel Wordperfect office...
$165 for OEM Office XP is "soooo expensive?"
yes, it is. 165$ is ALOT of money to me. And it probably always will be.
I'm not sure how old you are, but wait until you buy your first house and get your first summer power bill.
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
I'm not sure how old you are, but wait until you buy your first house and get your first summer power bill.Originally posted by: Johnbear007yes, it is. 165$ is ALOT of money to me. And it probably always will be.Originally posted by: AmusedOne$165 for OEM Office XP is "soooo expensive?"Originally posted by: gogeeta13Speaking of which, The Microsoft office is soooo expensive I have to choose from either 97 pro, which only now is affordable or Corel Wordperfect office...Originally posted by: UberDave i'll start purchasing an OS from Microsoft once they reduce their prices. To me it should be like $60 compared to the $150+ they've been charging.... and thats being generous.
Originally posted by: jjsole
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
I'm not sure how old you are, but wait until you buy your first house and get your first summer power bill.Originally posted by: Johnbear007yes, it is. 165$ is ALOT of money to me. And it probably always will be.Originally posted by: AmusedOne$165 for OEM Office XP is "soooo expensive?"Originally posted by: gogeeta13Speaking of which, The Microsoft office is soooo expensive I have to choose from either 97 pro, which only now is affordable or Corel Wordperfect office...Originally posted by: UberDave i'll start purchasing an OS from Microsoft once they reduce their prices. To me it should be like $60 compared to the $150+ they've been charging.... and thats being generous.
Its all relative. M$ abused their monopoly and don't deserve the high prices that they put on their OS's. Their making a killing off these and they deserve to get reemed.
This is corporate liberation theology at its finest. They are <STRONG>evil</STRONG>, so by screwing them its only screwing evil, which is a good thing.![]()
Originally posted by: NFS4
Originally posted by: billgates380
Another vote for Win2k, it's been better all along anyways.
Not for me...WinXP is soooooooooo much better on all fronts. I can't even go back to using Win2k on my rig...it's too counterproductive.
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
I agree with you 100%.
How much harder is it to recycle old code from Office 2K and add some useless features to it to make Office XP and charge $169+ than it is to create something like Neverwinter Nights for $44? And don't give me that BS on customer service because I don't know anyone that uses CS for Office anyway.
The reason why MS gets away with it is because it is a monopoly.
Originally posted by: VFAA
How much is a legal copy of MS Windows XP Pro Corporate and where can I buy it?
Originally posted by: pulse8
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
I agree with you 100%.
How much harder is it to recycle old code from Office 2K and add some useless features to it to make Office XP and charge $169+ than it is to create something like Neverwinter Nights for $44? And don't give me that BS on customer service because I don't know anyone that uses CS for Office anyway.
The reason why MS gets away with it is because it is a monopoly.
Ummmm...Office XP basically has 6 programs with it.
Word
Excel
Front Page
Powerpoint
Outlook
Access
NWN is a single game.
Even if they charged $30 a program, at 6 programs that's $180. I'd say $169 isn't too bad.
Originally posted by: VFAA
Originally posted by: VFAA
How much is a legal copy of MS Windows XP Pro Corporate and where can I buy it?
?
And why dont they charge *per* program? I only use word anyways!
Originally posted by: Lucky
Originally posted by: pulse8
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
I agree with you 100%.
How much harder is it to recycle old code from Office 2K and add some useless features to it to make Office XP and charge $169+ than it is to create something like Neverwinter Nights for $44? And don't give me that BS on customer service because I don't know anyone that uses CS for Office anyway.
The reason why MS gets away with it is because it is a monopoly.
Ummmm...Office XP basically has 6 programs with it.
Word
Excel
Front Page
Powerpoint
Outlook
Access
NWN is a single game.
Even if they charged $30 a program, at 6 programs that's $180. I'd say $169 isn't too bad.
$170 is OEM. What percentage of customers are savvy enough to understand that and order from the appropriate venues? I'd have to say its a minority. Retail is a lot higher.
And why dont they charge *per* program? I only use word anyways!
Have I not seen Word for sale individually?
Originally posted by: Lucky
Have I not seen Word for sale individually?
:Q How would I know what you have not seen?![]()
Originally posted by: Turin39789
doom3 will run on linux!????
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: ZeroBurn
have pirates ever been very hard behind, if not a few steps in front? whether it be the leaked dvd encryption or a magic marker, there'll be ways around it. if they spent more efforts on creating their actual product rather than expend resources on circumventing people, perhaps more people would be willing to purchase their products.
Let's try this another way:
Have shoplifters ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be fake gift boxes with false doors or special tools to remove anti-theft tags there will always be a way around it. If stores spent more efforts on keeping better stock in their stores rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be willing to buy clothes.
Nope, sounds pretty stupid.
Let's try it this way:
Have car thieves ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be Slim jims or ignition popping tools there will always be a way around it. If car makers spent more efforts on building nicer cars rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be interested in buying cars.
Nope, that's pretty stupid as well.
I guess this means that blaming the victim really is stupid.
One huge, gaping hole in your logic: The loss of an item of clothing or a car represents a real, tangible, physical loss to the owner. Where is the real, physical, tangible loss to Microsoft when a copy is duplicated.
Now, let's say that instead of stealing the item of clothing the "theif" instead duplicated the clothing and walked home with that item of clothing, leaving the store owner with his original item of clothing. Let's say that, instead of Joe losing his fancy new Corvette to a theif, that instead the theif somehow duplicates the Corvette and drives home with his own copy?
Don't compare apples and oranges.
Originally posted by: Ultima
Amused one, do you just not reply to people when you can't think of a witty answer? For anyone else out there, I'd love to see someone look at this objectively and give their thoughts. Many of you liken piracy to material theft; I however don't see it that way:
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: ZeroBurn
have pirates ever been very hard behind, if not a few steps in front? whether it be the leaked dvd encryption or a magic marker, there'll be ways around it. if they spent more efforts on creating their actual product rather than expend resources on circumventing people, perhaps more people would be willing to purchase their products.
Let's try this another way:
Have shoplifters ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be fake gift boxes with false doors or special tools to remove anti-theft tags there will always be a way around it. If stores spent more efforts on keeping better stock in their stores rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be willing to buy clothes.
Nope, sounds pretty stupid.
Let's try it this way:
Have car thieves ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be Slim jims or ignition popping tools there will always be a way around it. If car makers spent more efforts on building nicer cars rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be interested in buying cars.
Nope, that's pretty stupid as well.
I guess this means that blaming the victim really is stupid.
One huge, gaping hole in your logic: The loss of an item of clothing or a car represents a real, tangible, physical loss to the owner. Where is the real, physical, tangible loss to Microsoft when a copy is duplicated.
Now, let's say that instead of stealing the item of clothing the "theif" instead duplicated the clothing and walked home with that item of clothing, leaving the store owner with his original item of clothing. Let's say that, instead of Joe losing his fancy new Corvette to a theif, that instead the theif somehow duplicates the Corvette and drives home with his own copy?
Don't compare apples and oranges.
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: Ultima
Amused one, do you just not reply to people when you can't think of a witty answer? For anyone else out there, I'd love to see someone look at this objectively and give their thoughts. Many of you liken piracy to material theft; I however don't see it that way:
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: ZeroBurn
have pirates ever been very hard behind, if not a few steps in front? whether it be the leaked dvd encryption or a magic marker, there'll be ways around it. if they spent more efforts on creating their actual product rather than expend resources on circumventing people, perhaps more people would be willing to purchase their products.
Let's try this another way:
Have shoplifters ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be fake gift boxes with false doors or special tools to remove anti-theft tags there will always be a way around it. If stores spent more efforts on keeping better stock in their stores rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be willing to buy clothes.
Nope, sounds pretty stupid.
Let's try it this way:
Have car thieves ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be Slim jims or ignition popping tools there will always be a way around it. If car makers spent more efforts on building nicer cars rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be interested in buying cars.
Nope, that's pretty stupid as well.
I guess this means that blaming the victim really is stupid.
One huge, gaping hole in your logic: The loss of an item of clothing or a car represents a real, tangible, physical loss to the owner. Where is the real, physical, tangible loss to Microsoft when a copy is duplicated.
Now, let's say that instead of stealing the item of clothing the "theif" instead duplicated the clothing and walked home with that item of clothing, leaving the store owner with his original item of clothing. Let's say that, instead of Joe losing his fancy new Corvette to a theif, that instead the theif somehow duplicates the Corvette and drives home with his own copy?
Don't compare apples and oranges.
More justification for theft.![]()
I wonder what your reaction would be if your boss told you something like this when he refused to pay you for a days/weeks/months work?
Intellectual property is no less property than anything else. You are stealing someone's work, and using it without paying for it.
The only hole here, is in your morality.
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: Ultima
Amused one, do you just not reply to people when you can't think of a witty answer? For anyone else out there, I'd love to see someone look at this objectively and give their thoughts. Many of you liken piracy to material theft; I however don't see it that way:
Originally posted by: AmusedOne
Originally posted by: ZeroBurn
have pirates ever been very hard behind, if not a few steps in front? whether it be the leaked dvd encryption or a magic marker, there'll be ways around it. if they spent more efforts on creating their actual product rather than expend resources on circumventing people, perhaps more people would be willing to purchase their products.
Let's try this another way:
Have shoplifters ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be fake gift boxes with false doors or special tools to remove anti-theft tags there will always be a way around it. If stores spent more efforts on keeping better stock in their stores rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be willing to buy clothes.
Nope, sounds pretty stupid.
Let's try it this way:
Have car thieves ever been very far behind, if not a few steps in front? Whether it be Slim jims or ignition popping tools there will always be a way around it. If car makers spent more efforts on building nicer cars rather than spending resources on circumventing thieves, perhaps more people would be interested in buying cars.
Nope, that's pretty stupid as well.
I guess this means that blaming the victim really is stupid.
One huge, gaping hole in your logic: The loss of an item of clothing or a car represents a real, tangible, physical loss to the owner. Where is the real, physical, tangible loss to Microsoft when a copy is duplicated.
Now, let's say that instead of stealing the item of clothing the "theif" instead duplicated the clothing and walked home with that item of clothing, leaving the store owner with his original item of clothing. Let's say that, instead of Joe losing his fancy new Corvette to a theif, that instead the theif somehow duplicates the Corvette and drives home with his own copy?
Don't compare apples and oranges.
More justification for theft.![]()
I wonder what your reaction would be if your boss told you something like this when he refused to pay you for a days/weeks/months work?
Intellectual property is no less property than anything else. You are stealing someone's work, and using it without paying for it.
The only hole here, is in your morality.
