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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.next.software
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!bloom-picayune.mit.edu!athena.mit.edu!shanega
- From: shanega@athena.mit.edu (Shane G. Artis)
- Subject: Re: Solid Value, Rulers, and Copy Protection (long)
- Message-ID: <1992Aug12.152628.27611@athena.mit.edu>
- Sender: shanega@athena.mit.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: e40-008-13.mit.edu
- Organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- References: <1992Aug9.181408.1652@dpp> <dillon.0l5x@overload.Berkeley.CA.US> <1992Aug12.015856.13142@fsg.com>
- Date: Wed, 12 Aug 1992 15:26:28 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <1992Aug12.015856.13142@fsg.com> chuck@fsg.com (Chuck Yerkes) writes:
- >
- >Having followed this thread for a while, I must comment on some things.
- >I'm going to extrapolate a bit to all computer systems instead of just next.
- >
- > I find that an application for Unix costs a great amount more than
- >a functionally similiar application on the PC or the Mac (single
- >tasking machines). I have found accounting software for unix that
- >costs $1500 that isn't much better than $600 software on the PC/Mac. I
- >have found, though that NeXT software is much more reasonably priced
- >(compared to Unix software) in general.
- > [deleted]
- > This often happens in Unix. It's a more complicated to program in
- >than DOS (or at least you can't write the junk code that is found in
- >many DOS programs - you have to write programs correctly), but often
- >programs are used the same way - 1 user plugging away at it. This does
- >not justify the price differences that one finds in general purpose
- >apps (like word processors and simple databases) that one finds.
- >
-
- It is much easier to answer questions like these when you consider
- the economics of the situation. I am a developer with products on the
- NeXT and the PC. The PC products are priced lower than the NeXT
- products. This has nothing to do with personal greed. It has
- everything to do with the size of the market base. The NeXT will sell
- to fewer people, so it needs to be priced higher to recoup its nearly
- equal development and support costs.
-
- Also bear in mind that most people with Unix machines are in
- business or education still, and are not individual home users with small
- budgets. Businesses often by in bulk and receive discounts that bring
- the software costs much closer to the PC costs.
-
- Thus, same program, different price, which seems unfair but remains
- necessary in general.
-
- Shane
-
-