Re: OneDrive Users: Changes for the Worse
Yeah well, watch how it'll work out, or in this case, won't work out for them, unless they can get under the general consumer's guard again with some other catchy gimmick. I suppose that, however, much like many of the greater companies who have brought out plans that sounded good and slapped their audiences in the face or pulled the rug out from under their feet at the very last minute, such as AT&T, Verizon, and whoever else was responsible for bringing about the idea of unlimited data for smartphone users for a certain price only to find it was not sustainable, they dont' necessarily have to feel the pain. I find it kind of hard to feel sorry for a huge company when it spends it's time trashing people who, for whatever odd reason, won't read fine print. It's easy enough when you have the money to do it, to assemble a legal team of sorts to put together a lengthy terms of service and word it in such a way that even if you do read it entirely you might miss something, and people just, don't get the idea that when a company says unlimited they mean virtually unlimited, or unlimited until we find it hard to pay the bill. One could argue that nothing in this world is free, and that is true. So the question becomes, why offer it as such? Regardless what you think of apple's new music service, I think they had the right idea when they basically said, three months of free service, come and get it while it's good. This is the difference between shouting out that you have free burgers and showing up with only 20 though the public doesn't know about it, and shouting out that you have free burgers while supplies last. I'd have trouble not calling the former a greedy practice.
_______________________________________________ Audiogames-reflector mailing list Audiogames-reflector@sabahattin-gucukoglu.com https://sabahattin-gucukoglu.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/audiogames-reflector