Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 19th Sep 2010 20:32 UTC, submitted by sawboss
Thread beginning with comment 441808
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RE: In the land of the blind...
by rom508 on Mon 20th Sep 2010 16:35
in reply to "In the land of the blind..."
The truth is that we don't know what pricing model Intel is going to use for this system. The photo in the article mentions upgrading "from 2- to 4-way multi-task processing" among other things, which I'm assuming refers to cores. News: not everyone needs four cores, and plenty of people would pay $20 less, even $10 less.
Why would you even consider this to be a good deal?? It is designed not to offer you a lower price, but make you pay twice for something that you have already payed.
It's like you go and buy a house, but you can only use half of the rooms, even though you own the entire house. The other rooms are bricked up, unless you make another payment of %10.
This practice is totally despicable. It is rife in software industry and now hardware manufacturers decided to jump on the bandwagon.
RE[2]: In the land of the blind...
by earksiinni on Mon 20th Sep 2010 16:44
in reply to "RE: In the land of the blind..."
RE[2]: In the land of the blind...
by antidroid on Mon 20th Sep 2010 17:26
in reply to "RE: In the land of the blind..."




Member since:
2009-03-27
Ahhh...the smell of sweet, sweet editorial bias in the morning.
The title of the original article: "Intel wants to charge $50 to unlock stuff your CPU can already do"
Perhaps an alternative title: "Intel to disable features and lower prices by $50"?
The truth is that we don't know what pricing model Intel is going to use for this system. The photo in the article mentions upgrading "from 2- to 4-way multi-task processing" among other things, which I'm assuming refers to cores. News: not everyone needs four cores, and plenty of people would pay $20 less, even $10 less.
Many of these people wouldn't even upgrade a CPU anyway. For all we know, Intel's target demographic with this model are the people who buy a new computer once it's "broken" by malware and viruses. Those guys weren't going to be upgrading anyway, but they'll be roped in by cheaper prices.