Hi Charles,

that's close enough. However, I don't believe anyone said it was right
or particularly. fair. That's just the way business generally works.

For example, when I took a marketing class in college we studied a
marketing technique called perceived obsolescence. The way it works is
you take an existing product and you find a way to repackage and
resell it to the customer without having to spend much on developing a
new product to replace it.

So let's say you purchased a brand new computer from Del with an
almond colored case, keyboard, mouse, and flat screen display. Six
months later Del has parts left over from that run so they put them in
a brand new case that is smaller, painted black, and has a matching
USB keyboard, wireless mouse, and flat screen monitor. The
motherboard, hard drive, sound card, etc inside the computer is
exactly the same as you purchased but because of the nice new case,
keyboard and mouse you might think you are getting something new when
it is the same product in a slightly different form.

A lot of what Microsoft does is for the same reasons. I don't know too
many people who likes the ribbons in Microsoft Office and File
Explorer etc but it looks different. I figure the primary reason they
do it is because of perceived obsolescence. They can take a product
like Wordpad, which has been around for years, and make it new just by
taking out the menu bars, replacing them with ribbons, changing a few
other user interface elements and packing it on their new OS as an
updated version of the software when in reality the software hasn't
changed. There isn't anything new we didn't have before like a spell
checker, grammar checker, thesaurus, whatever, but it looks new and is
marketed as such.

Cheers!

On 4/30/13, Charles Rivard <wee1s...@fidnet.com> wrote:
> Is this how it works?
>
> Microsoft sells the new OS.  That OS doesn't support older hardware and
> software, so hardware and software developers make new products to run on
> the new OS.  The computer manufacturers make the new computers that handle
> all of this other new stuff.  Now, the consumer must buy the new computers
> that come with the new software and hardware running the new OS.  The only
> ones who are short changed are the consumers.  If we don't have the money to
>
> buy the new for whatever reason, we're screwed.  What's wrong with this
> picture from the consumer's side of things?
>
> --
> If guns kill people, writing implements cause grammatical and spelling
> errors!

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