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- From: bilimoria@inland.com
- Newsgroups: misc.consumers
- Subject: Re: Prodigy - Don't even think about it!
- Message-ID: <1992Nov10.085638.2471@inland.com>
- Date: 10 Nov 92 08:56:38 CST
- References: <aa.720292810@hela.iti.org> <1992Nov02.162920.105086@watson.ibm.com>
- Organization: Inland Steel Company; East Chicago, IN
- Lines: 73
-
- In article <1992Nov02.162920.105086@watson.ibm.com>, rubin@watson.ibm.com (Bill Rubin) writes:
- > In <aa.720292810@hela.iti.org> aa@iti.org (Aayush Asthana) writes:
- >>Prodigy is not worth the diskette their software comes on! If you
- >>or someone you know is even considering getting this service
- >>consider this: you'll pay $14 bucks for information you can get in
- >>any public library and have the honor of being inundatd with
- >>advertisements throughout your sessions. The bottom line is that
- >>although they claim to bring information to you, it turns out to be
- >>an excruciating experience since everything that you see is already
- >>there in your daily newspaper and your mailbox!
- >>--
- >>Here's how this story goes: you are offered one of these special
- >>deals which you accept on a trial period [the catch: you get
- >>software ten days later and have actually 20 days to evaluate the
- >>junk]; you set-up and log-in and suddenly you realize that every
- >>session takes up twice as much time and is hardly entertaining as
- >>some of the newsgroups are [if you read WSJ, BusWeek, Money, daily
- >>paper, and have access to a phone you've covered 50 percent of the
- >>content of prodigy anyway] and all special offers are really bad
- >>deals [eg. the on-line Amer.Airlines ticket res. system gives you
- >>listed fares which are typically 25% above travel agent specials; the
- >>on-line bargain-hunter actually recovers evrything via the S&H
- >>charges plus you could get the same stuff in any store anyway at
- >>clearance prices; BillPay USA charges a $9.00 dollar monthly service
- >>charge!! compare that to PayMate's $2.00 per mo. service charge and
- >>$0.10 less per electronic payment and almost all bank's have this
- >>now] -- so needless to say I tried to cancel; called their
- >
- > It's not often you see a post with so much misinformation in it. Where
- > shall I start? How about that the trial period is 30 days from the first
- > day you sign on, not the day you ask them to send the software (this should
- > seem obvious to most people since you can buy these packs in the store and
- > obviously they have no idea when you will be signing on). It is true that
- > you can get the same information in your daily paper, but then you have to
- > wait for that paper to arrive and go out and get it. On Prodigy you get
- > news as it happens, and you don't have to buy the WSJ, Business Week, etc to
- > supplement your local paper. What else? Ads.. yes, Prodigy has ads. You
- > get used to them after awhile and learn to ignore them if you choose to.
- > Your newspaper has ads, too, and you pay to read them. Does anyone complain
- > about that? And information by phone? Would this be by way of a 900 or
- > other special charge call? As for home banking, you say that "all banks
- > have this". Well, not here in NY, only a couple have it and one is on
- > Prodigy. The AA ticketing service is standard Eaasy Sabre you will get
- > anywhere else, and it includes all published fares. You are probably
- > talking about consolidator tickets with lower fares and you won't get those
- > directly from any airline. However, you CAN search for the lowest normal
- > fares and flights and become a better educated consumer. It's true, the
- > shopping and prices are not really that great a deal, but that's not
- > Prodigy, it's the merchants who have signed on and if you don't want to buy
- > anything there's nothing that says that you have to. How great a deal is
- > the shopping on Compuserve? I doubt anything is a real bargain if you know
- > to shop around.
- >
- > As for the bulletin boards, I agree with Adam Lasnick's earlier reply here
- > that you get a much better "mix" of people on Prodigy than here on Usenet.
- > While Usenet is nice, and sometimes useful, there is something to be said
- > for having conversations with housewifes, doctors, and others who don't
- > happen to work somewhere that they can get a news feed.
- >
- > Anyway, if you're interested in Prodigy, give it a try. You may like it,
- > then again you may not. It all depends on what you're looking for and what
- > you're willing to pay. Personally, I am unwilling to pay by the hour for
- > any service, so Compuserve is out.
- >
- > -- Bill rubin@watson.ibm.com
- >
- > Disclaimer: Yes, IBM owns half of Prodigy but I am just a satisfied user...
-
-
- I'm not crazy about Prodigy, but I must point out an error re. CompuServe.
- True, they have a billing plan to pay by the hour, but they also have a monthly
- rate for a certain number of minutes (I forget how many) and the monthly rate
- is less than Prodigy's $14.95 which has gone up 25% in 2 years.
-