Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 19th Sep 2010 20:32 UTC, submitted by sawboss
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The cost to keep the feature on the chip maybe a few cents but the cost to upgrade will be $50 meaning that the margins will be massive in terms of after sale upgrades.
In other words Intel could nickle and dime you to death with their crippleware CPU in comparison with the lumpsum version.
In other words Intel could nickle and dime you to death with their crippleware CPU in comparison with the lumpsum version.
You got it - just like the mainframe vendors will sell a machine with the CPU sockets maxed out but only the ones you've paid for are enabled. Another example of a high end feature scaled down for the little people thinking they've got a great deal - in much the same way Microsoft nickle and dime end users with half a dozen versions of Windows when a single version would do the trick.




Member since:
2005-07-06
The cost to keep the feature on the chip maybe a few cents but the cost to upgrade will be $50 meaning that the margins will be massive in terms of after sale upgrades.
In other words Intel could nickle and dime you to death with their crippleware CPU in comparison with the lumpsum version.