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Your Name,Having done statistics at university, surveys / polls / studies are not accurate. The problem is that too many people believe they are accurate and even worse the morons in management believe the results and base their decisions on them. :-((or when they do, it's via a survey of a tiny proportion of the customers).Thats called statistically probing. It time-wise and financially makes no sense to call /all/ (prospective!) customers and ask them about a new product.
The cost of any hardware features on a device are passed on to the customer, usually at an inflated price. Removing the feature rarely results in a lower price, so that "extra" money goes straight into the company's pockets.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.:-( Now you're starting to sound like Arlen (Marion). You have zero to go on in that direction, while I've been trying to provide several reasons why prices change. If you do have reasons to think such a thing than please include them. I regard this as a discussion, and I'm quite willing to hear and consider such information.
They don't use "safe" colours" They use the colours that their over-paid fashion experts tell them will be "in vogue" when the car is released. That's why there was a fad for bright banana yellow cars that every car reviewer told people to avoid because the redsale value would plummet.Car companies for example, plan their standard car colours due to what they *think* will be in fashion once the car is on sale.Not a good example, as you can effectivily buy a car of any color and than give it a paint job. Yes, thats more expensive than going with one of the standard colors. So, most people don't.
But its actually a nice example to why car manufacturers will not paint their cars in every color there is : there is a good chance that they will than not sell all the cars with less-favorable colors. Just imagine yourself in a purple-and-yellow pokedot car. Or a two-color chessboard pattern. Or, as a straight hetro, in a pink one. :-) So, the manufacturer chooses to paint their cars with "safe" colors, to minimize any losses in that regard.
Technically you can, but not with Apple's design ethos of having no visible screws and soldering everything down.Build to order options can make it easier for customers to get (to some degree) the features they actually do want.And as I already tried to explain, quite a "bit" more expensive. Most likely the whole device would than need to be redesigned, as a smartphone is rather compact (very little, if any empty space), and you can't just throw another component into it.
The main cause of so-called "inflation" is the ever-increasing pay packet given to the morons in management.Those who insist on buying the latest toy on the block when there current device still works perfectly well are simply idiots with more money than sense ... and it's these fools that big business relies on to keep going.Absolutily. And you should include those to-much-money bling-bling people as a cause of stuff getting more expensive. :-|
Most people are willing to pay a sensible price, but the reality is most companies (especially tech companies) gough the customer for as mush as they can thanks to the greedy stupidity of "supply and demand". :-(Which proves the point. The company *is* trying to make more money at the customer's expense ... i.e. they *are* goughing the customerI'm glad you added that smiley. :-)
(to some degree). :-p
Yes, companies are out to make as much money off of their customers as they can. On the other hand, customers expect/demand "the best ever {product}", while not really wanting to pay a cent for it. IOW, they are thieves too. <whistle>
Regards,
Rudy Wieser
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