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Posts: 337 | Thanked: 283 times | Joined on Nov 2009 @ NYC
#52
Originally Posted by nseika View Post
Problem is, there’s also the now-and-here requirement.

Take example, I want to buy PC and want to use Photoshop, but I don’t want to use Windows. Yes, there’s Gimp and other alternative, but assume nobody write the software yet. Does that means I had to bear for years waiting for someone to think it worth the trouble writing that image editor. Imagine if the need is professional.
I understand perfectly well your premises. Well, if the need is professional, then the investment should be made by the company. Which explains the ubiquity of Windows. I only tolerate Windows for my work needs because it came practically for free with my new laptop, and 7 turned out pretty good. All software that I use comes form the Linux world, and I love it. The second I find anything annoying about Windows, it's gone...

For now, the new platform need to have the value too. They can’t just play underdog, or give promise. Well, Google can, but they have big name and good record on delivering recently so they’re a better bet. If Nokia and Intel want to give MeeGo a better traction, they better get try to get more (vocal and influential) geek credit than stockholder credit.
Well think also that something of great value today may leave you completely dependent and robbed tomorrow.

PS: since one of the value is about applications, what if they conduct a survey to see which applications users needed from other platform, then aggresively help those software authors to port their code (rather than merely asking them, which they might not bother the unfeasible touble) and help maintaining it.
Yes, that will be enormous cost to gamble.
I have made a similar, perhaps more naive suggestion in the past: why not find out how many copies of a popular application a certain developer sells, and then buy from the developer the ones for the first three or six months -- not the copyright to the app, but individual copies (which could even be resold to end users). That should be incentive for some at least to port their code, since it would guarantee them a start on the new market.
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