Yup, if you did a direct comparison factoring in cost of living, you would even more shocked. 8 pounds is going to take you a lot farther in India than it is in the UK.That maybe so, but the UK minimum wage is nearly ?6 per hour. You can't really do a direct comparison based on the exchange rate because cost of living is so different.
I'm talking about prices in India. You can build a decent computer for about Rs. 10000-Rs.15000 (in fact, the local companies that have Linux loaded sell their desktops for that much--including a monitor sometimes) and then you'd have to burn at least Rs. 8500 on Vista or XP.A couple of points. I purchased an OEM copy of vista shortly after it came out when I built my PC at the time (it wasn't high end by any means) and I don't recall it being anywhere near to 60% of the cost of the base unit.
Umm.... the tech support staff is being outsourced. They get paid pretty much minimum wage to do the support calls sitting in India, ironically, for a product that probably costs the same as their monthly salary. Companies have found pretty much all ways to minimize the cost of tech support. Also, with the internet taking off, most people turn to Google for tech support, not the software company. The actual cost of development is another thing. Many software companies these days outsource portions of their development (especially modular portions, such as Testing) to cheaper job markets such as India and China. So they are trying to decrease their development costs to begin with. Those costs are still there, but I feel that most of them are covered even before you get into the consumer market--with manufacturer deals and whatnot. However, how can you justify charging about $100 for a version of XP, now? There are almost no costs associated with it now, and I'm certain they have made large profits on it already, and do not have to back-cover development costs.Back to vodka again. You say that once Microsoft release their latest OS they have no costs other than burning it. What about developments (not all bug fixes!), what about tech support staff for you to ring? What about the actual cost of developing it in the first place. Yes with vodka you have to keep buying ingredients but your development costs are pretty much zero, you dont need a helpdesk and believe me the ingredients are pretty cheap. I've never distilled my own vodka but I have done beer. Believe me there's a big profit in making alcohol.
That's simply the iTunes price that I converted using the exchange rate. IIRC, iTunes opened it's stores to Indian users, but at the same prices.Only the single mp3 price makes sense to me. Do they allow you to download any single mp3 you wish? In highest quality?
I'm not sure what point you are trying to make here. The point I was making is that you see that it's the software companies that have failed to grasp the idea that people in India have less money. Obviously theater owners have to price their movies based on how much the public can pay. And I made the point a few posts ago that the Indian movie studios have finally realized that overpriced DVD's are silly and have slashed prices.Not all higher though. My prices came from Amazon which sells software and music etc pretty damn cheap. ?1.50 for a DVD, we can't get anywhere near that even for bargain bin buys. ?3.50 to go to the cinema, ahhh I remember back in the day when they used to cost that. 63p for an MP3 track, thats similar considering the biggest MP3 seller is itunes and they are famous for their 79p per track policy. Recommended retail for vista home premium in the UK is ?165.99.
I don't know the current value, but back in October 2008 the price of petrol in UK was almost double of India: SourceAway from movies and stuff, whats the cost of a litre of petrol in india? Average UK price for a litre of unleaded petrol was 90p last month near as damn it.
How do you know if you like it before you have used it?I have a simple theory. If i like something enough, i buy it, otherwise i don't. I have no qualms about not paying for something if i don't like it enough.
Umm.... the tech support staff is being outsourced. They get paid pretty much minimum wage to do the support calls sitting in India, ironically, for a product that probably costs the same as their monthly salary. Companies have found pretty much all ways to minimize the cost of tech support.
How do you know if you like it before you have used it?
Who are you defining as pirates? Are you defining as a pirate a (1) person who sells an illegal copy of software, a (2) person who buys an illegal copy of software, or a (3) person who downloads an illegal copy of software? Or some mixture of the three? If it's (1) then price very much affects the pirate because the demand for the game exists because the company price is set too high. If it is (2), then price very much affects the pirate because obviously they are willing to pay a price to buy the game. If you see a $2-$3 difference between a pirated copy and a legal copy, I would argue that most people would buy the legal one. And if it is (3) then I'd be on the fence. There are many, many people who download software because they think it is too expensive. There are also many, many people who download software because they think everything should be free. That's a harder one to decide.As said though, I fully believe that price doesn't affect most pirates.
They don't make a huge amount of money in that they could make a huger amount of money if they sold it for ?28 or ?38. But unless you know their expenses, you can make no claims for what their profit is. Sure, their sales may be smaller, but that does not necessarily mean that their revenue is. I think software is a pretty elastic good in that if you lower prices, there will be a lot more demand for it.You can hardly say SI make a huge amount of money out of a game that they sell for ?18.
I am not in anyway encouraging stealing software, but I ask you, generally, what are you doing as a consumer to let the company know that you think their OS is overpriced? Are you switching to another OS? Are you continuing to buy their OS? If consumers think they are shortchanged and keep on buying the product, then the manufacturers have nothing to worry about. Think of it as EA Sports' cricket series. Everytime a game comes out, all gamers bag the game. But everyone still goes and buys the next game. What incentive is there for EA to change anything?MS with their OS? Well, that's different because OS are in a different league to games. However, I do believe they are overpriced, does that mean I would steal XP or Vista? No.