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Confident Apple for 2004
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Charging for iPhoto and iMovie is wrong |
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2004-01-08 07:20:23 |
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anonymous2
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I disagree with the practice of charging for iPhoto and iMovie. People who have had their Mac's for some time operated under the impression that the original i products where a part of the OS. Each iteration of the products was a free download. The only exception being iDVD, although I can justify it due to the size of the download.
Now I have all of my content in these applications and have become a regular part of my computing experience. Now that I'm hooked in Apple is going to start charging for them. I think it's wrong. Banks allowed ATM usage to be free, once users became hooked they started charging. Drug dealers operate the same way, first hit free. Once your addicted they start to charge.
That's my 2 cents.
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Showing messages 1 through 2 of 2.
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Analogies considered harmful
2004-01-08 07:57:11
anonymous2
[Reply | View]
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Have your current versions of iPhoto and iMovie stopped working?
2004-01-08 07:46:07
anonymous2
[Reply | View]
Your ATM analogy, like your drug-dealer one, is rendered irrelevant by the fact that these apps are not a service or consumable product which is being charged for after a free trial period. You can continue to use the old versions as long as you like. I can't believe people would complain about $49 for GarageBand, let alone a whole suite.
That would be once *you're* addicted if you must use comparisons with a world most of us have never experienced, perhaps you could add the word 'crack' to complete that Slashdot experience?