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Peripheral cons, unintelligible property, bipolar markets, & a political rant (actually somewhat on topic)
"Don Allen" wrote in message ... Yes, and sadly, practically all consumers want the cheapest price point on everything related to consumer electronics, not only computers and peripherals. Prior to computers becoming a mainstream and commodity product, prices were high for everything. Remember the days of a Seagate ST-225 20MB hard drive at a price point of $300??? I think DOS 3.3 for my second computer (first was a Commodore 128 (I refuse to count the VIC 20)) was around $380 I think. Now I realize I had been "corn holed" (see below). Without a doubt, Microsoft certainly has its faults. But, without the gang from Redmond, WA, we would all still be paying ultra-premium prices for everything related to computing. With the commodity mentality of computer marketing today, low-end products are everywhere, especially in the ink-jet printer market. Not if the universities betrayed us by going commercial with UNIX and the software written for it. They T.O.ed people such as Richard Stallman. Patents and even copyrights are wholly inappropriate in the software world. All the new enclosure movement has done is make a few more wealthy monopolists such as Bill Gates. THE SECOND ENCLOSURE MOVEMENT AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE PUBLIC DOMAIN JAMES BOYLE http://www.law.duke.edu/journals/lcp...ing2003p33.htm You can still buy high-quality industrial-strength products that meet the original poster's basic technical requirements, but you do have to pay the price. A high-quality color laser printer is the best solution, but be prepared to pay multi-thousand dollar pricing for it. However, it will outlast a myriad of cheap inkjets, and be ultimately cheaper to operate. Anything not geared to consumers looking for a toy is being sold to big corporations with thousands of employees and deep pockets. Small businesses and wannabes are an underserved market. Linux is a fine operating system, but it really needs to get its act together regarding up-to-date hardware compatibility and drivers. Much of Linux development tends to target European standards, and most consumer computer users here in the USA don't use Postscript-based printers - rather PCL-based printers. Up until recently, some Linux distros did not include PCL drivers for popular HP LaserJets! And, if your using a 3Com/USR controller-based PCI internal dial-up modem, good luck on finding a proper driver under Linux. Distros do seem to often be behind. Many are one person crack jobs based on a distro that is based on a distro (or something like that). Also, making the proprietary technology a carefully guarded secret requiring licensing of technology and encrypted binary code doesn't make things any easier. What do you expect? Digital Restrictions Mismanagement support? Flat-out illegal, even if clearly constitutional to anyone except a radical such as Rupert Murdock or Toilet Asscoft and most other Boomers who have no respect for our elders such as Tom Paine (if I'm lucky the rest are merely silent out of fear and not zonked out still). I already knew I was being lied to in the mid-80s, but only recently did I find out the true nature and extent of the underlying problems. Read up on "The Project for the New American Century," and geo-libertarianism (georgism, geoism "Henry George," "land value tax," and "single tax"), the history of corporate law, and the history of "The Pledge of Allegiance". http://www.oldamericancentury.org/ The view I subscribe to http://www.newamericancentury.org/ The view "they" subscribe to and numerous other places for neo-conservatism Dan Sullivan's Geolibertarian Home Page http://geolib.pair.com/ http://progress.org Has a geo-libertarian section Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy http://www.poclad.org/ American Friends Service Committee, Northeast Ohio office http://www.afsc.net/default.htm To Whom it May Concern, Part Two David vs. Goliath How we might fend off or ultimately overcome technologically superior human invaders, conquerors, or dictators in decades to come, with minimal casualties and financial loss on all sides http://www.jmooneyham.com/empdef.html See Rex Curry's site: http://members.ij.net/rex/ http://rexcurry.net/ Regarding "The Pledge" Amazingly, people who still want to keep the pledge for whatever reason (http://www.keepthepledge.com/history.php) openly admit most of what Rex Curry says. Notice the following mastery of understatement: Bellamy wanted to include equality, but the term could have created potential issues with the leaders of the program for which he wrote. Of course, Bellamy's ideas of what constitute "equality" are different from yours or mine. Bill Haught Extract tooth to reply. |
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Subject: The word "cons" was an editing mistake that should have read
"consumer item" or something to that effect-honest! Bill Haught Extract tooth to reply. |
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