When people say, "free as in beer" do they mean: 1-"you have the freedom to get it, but it will cost you $12.99 for an 18 pack--like at 7-11"
2-it actually costs nothing, (like at a University of Utah kegger?) Why do people say that anyway? Is it common to give beer away? That sounds like a bad business model to me. To be less confusing, if they really mean that there is NO COST, maybe they should say, "Free as in air." I would have said, "free as in water," but there are growing numbers of morons who buy bottled water (evian/naive.) random thoughts, Ryan ____________________ BYU Unix Users Group http://uug.byu.edu/ ___________________________________________________________________ List Info: http://uug.byu.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/uug-list
