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Your Name,I was replying to you sentence:
...Are they ? What do you think it costs to manufacture small batches of a certain product ?Depend on the shop's agreement with the manufacturer.No, what doe it cost the *manufacturer* to create a small batch.
You know, changing the machines to work with the differing device, printing and adding different documentation, putting them into different boxes and all that. in other words: the set-up costs. The smaller the resulting batch, the higher the devided setup-cost will beTo some degree Apple and many other device makers already run "small batch" manufacturing because users can order devices with their own options (although admittedly the iPhone's options are a lot less than the Mac options).
The line after the above ("And than there is the risk involved in not getting all of them sold.") deals with the stuff you where thinking of.
There are always multiple "reasons" and "excuses" as to why a company does something. Many of them are silly and superfluous when the reality is that the changes usually simply mean more money for the company.True. But its than also an argument againsts the OPs "they just do that to make you pay more".As for gouging, that only works when a single manufacturer is involved - or you must believe that all the manufacturers all over the worldare colluding.
Not colluding as such, but once Apple does something, all the others quickly follow.
The manufacturer's usually create what they *think* the customer wants, without actually bothering to ask the customer (or when they do, it's via a survey of a tiny proportion of the customers). Car companies for example, plan their standard car colours due to what they *think* will be in fashion once the car is on sale.Samsung even has a habit of making fun of Apple for do it, only then for Samsung to do exactly the same thing a few months later.That is what seems to happen, but why does it happen ? Perhaps because (most of) the buyers only want the newest-of-the-newest bling, and the sales numbers of the older model drops ? IOW, the manufacturing companies follow the customers wishes (opposing the OPs claims) ?
Which proves the point. The company *is* trying to make more money at the customer's expense ... i.e. they *are* goughing the customer (to some degree). :-pYes, there are various reasons and excuses for doing something (these days it is often the "green" environmental excuse), but it doesn't change the fact that the customer is getting less for the same price.I already mentioned in this thread that (big) companies are not altruistic. Worse, they are there to make as much money for their investors as they can. And yes, that means if a company can shorten an data cable by a decimeter or two and save a *lot* of money that way than it will do so.
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