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- Path: news.xnet.com!jcompton
- From: jcompton@flood.xnet.com (Jason Compton)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.programmer,comp.sys.amiga.games,alt.sys.amiga.demos,comp.sys.amiga.advocacy,comp.sys.amiga.hardware,comp.sys.amiga.misc,comp.sys.amiga.graphics
- Subject: Re: No more Starfighter? (was Re: AB3D II beats Quake....)
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.programmer,comp.sys.amiga.games,alt.sys.amiga.demos,comp.sys.amiga.advocacy,comp.sys.amiga.hardware,comp.sys.amiga.misc,comp.sys.amiga.graphics
- Date: 26 Mar 1996 00:13:50 GMT
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- Paul Copsey (paul@hectortd.demon.co.uk) wrote:
-
- : Consider this...
-
- : I own an Amiga, I have seen very little pirated software for it.
-
- : I have used pc's, and seen huge amounts of pirated/cracked and basically
- : unpaid for software, not just on a 'Here have a copy of this' basis, but in
- : companies who just don't bother to get proper site licences.
-
- : Now tell me that pirates had any part in killing the Amiga, properly
- : motivated they could have been a serious asset, as they seem to be the best
- : at getting s/ware to run from hd's that the original coder couldn't manage.
-
- There is a level of piracy, let's call it the "Piracy Equilibrium Level."
-
- Piracy below this level is good for a machine in the long run, because
- the perceived "free" availability of software encourages hardware sales.
- Increased hardware sales encourage increased software sales, and since
- not everyone can pirate all the software, more gets sold.
-
- This is how the Commodore 64 sold 22 million units.
-
- Piracy ABOVE this level is bad for a machine in the long run, because the
- increased hardware sales and software purchases do NOT make up for the
- piracy. Software developers leave the machine for greener pastures,
- hardware sales decline accordingly.
-
- This is what happened to the Amiga and the ST, to name a pair.
-
- In the PC market, the Piracy Equilibrium Level is fairly high. There are
- simply SO MANY users that the impact of one more piece of pirated
- software is minimal on the developers.
-
- In the Amiga markeet, the Piracy Equilibrium Level is damn near zero.
- Just about anything is bad, because there aren't enough potential buyers
- to be interested in the available "free" software. Instead, existing
- owners just free-ride off of commercial efforts, and that gets really
- tiresome really quickly for the publishers and developers.
-
- So yes, in a different market climate (the PC), what seems to be a lot of
- piracy in the long run further promotes the growth of the platform even
- though some developers lose in the short run. On the Amiga, just about
- everyone loses in the short run AND the long run.
-
- --
- Jason Compton jcompton@xnet.com
- Editor-in-Chief, Amiga Report Magazine (708) 741-0689 FAX
- Fire on the hemisphere below. Your finest hour.
- AR on Aminet - docs/mags/ar???.lha AR Mailing list - Mail me
- WWW - http://www.omnipresence.com/Amiga/News/AR, www.cucug.org/ar/ar.html
-