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A quite remarkable rhetorical exercise, but what are you trying to say? What, for example, is a . . .
* bent marketing cycle?
* a Greek tax?
* a fire of contempt?
* a MacAddict tax?
Dick, traditionally Apple would introduce a new product and upgrade it or make a price adjustment in about 6 month. 60 days bent the cycle, no one could have seen it coming.
In some circles the devaluation of the iPhone is being called a Geek Tax, a Fanboy Tax, or a MacAddict tax, early adopter tax, or a tax for the Mac enthusiast.
Much of the Apple community was fire up over this devaluation, contempt of the action was expressed by many, even in emails sent to Jobs.
Contempt 1 a: the act of despising : the state of mind of one who despises : disdain
b: lack of respect or reverence for somethingQUOTE
How does creating a . . .”problem and . . .(determining) what the remedy should be" constitute "a model of jurisprudence"?
Self regulation is good, determining what your own penalty should be after you violate trust is not a good model.
My statement:
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I don't think that will work as a model of jurisprudence.
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If . . ."the consumer fought long and hard to accomplish the right to an unlocked Cell-Phone . . . " somehow I think I missed that battle, as well as the peace treaty.
OK, start here:
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061124-8280.htmlhttp://gizmodo.com/gadgets/cellphones/free...able-216992.phpYour vigorous assertion of presumed truths does not make them real. Then, attempting to weave them together without regard to internal harmony or consistency does not constitute logical argumentation, rather some variety of a word salad.
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- I think Apple took their best shot at the faithful and lost. They used arbitrary excuses about the nature of the industry, bent their own marketing cycles, imposed a Geek tax, reversed the decision, offered a rebate, lit a fire of contempt and suspicion on future products and….if they had not offered the rebate would have done irreparable damage to their image.
- The case would have been brought to court with a lot more steam behind it and the court would have defined what was reasonable, taking the power away from the industry to exploit consumers when the opportunity suits them.
- Because of this action and the losses sustained by a few hundred thousand people, millions of potential Apple customers will have this example to refer too and be able to make a better choice as to what to purchase and when to purchase it.
- I'm not knocking the product, I see their dilemma, my objection was and is to impose a macAddict tax on the faithful.
- What I have seen is a reasonable perspective expressed, and advocates objections, but when asked, if the tactic was repeated or if Apple was to make this sort of exploitation of their faithful part of a steady diet, well no one pipes up and says: "Pick Me I want to pay 33% more than everyone else for the luxury of having my Apple product before my neighbor". If it's not something we can praise or agree with as a great marketing strategy going forward, why try to justify it now?
- Public outcry caused the grievance to be settled by Jobs, which satisfied some but didn't satisfy all. He created the problem and he determined what the remedy should be, wow, I don't think that will work as a model of jurisprudence.
- . . . How will anyone protect themselves against companies who diminish the value of their own product if we allow the telecom/computer companies too dictate what fair compensation for their misdeeds should be?
- . . . the consumer fought long and hard to accomplish the right to an unlocked Cell-Phone, Apple comes along and Bricks them under a software agreement.
- Stealing 33% of the value of your purchase within 60 is not only unheard of in the tradition of Apple marketing, but it's unheard of in the telecom industry as a whole.
- . . . the consumer fought long and hard to accomplish the right to an unlocked Cell-Phone, Apple comes along and Bricks them under a software agreement.
A quite remarkable rhetorical exercise, but what are you trying to say? What, for example, is a . . .
- bent marketing cycle?
- a Greek tax?
- a fire of contempt?
- a MacAddict tax?
How does creating a . . .
”problem and . . .(determining) what the remedy should be" constitute
"a model of jurisprudence"?
If . . .
"the consumer fought long and hard to accomplish the right to an unlocked Cell-Phone . . . " somehow I think I missed that battle, as well as the peace treaty.
I rest my case, I guess.