Which Price is Right?
slashdotNum2Big2Register writes "An interesting article at fastcompany about how things are being priced nowadays. The only drawback that concerns me is how each item and price can be connected to an individual. Amazon was already found to be doing this with their prices."
If that's not the best example of when people don't know what to price at, I don't know what is. Go to (say) expedia, travelocity, or destina.ca and price out a round-trip flight to some interesting place (I suggest Osaka). Prices range from $1400 to $6000 (CDN) on what is basically the same flight, with the same restrictions, at even the same timing conditions. And the expensive flights often include more stopovers and transfers too!
Perhaps with a $4 difference we may think differently, but I'd choose the cheap option any day when the difference is $300.
Doing the Right Thing should not be preempted by making a buck.
From the article:
"Computerworld also checked the price of the Men in Black DVD today and discovered that on Netscape the quoted price was $25.97, while it cost $23.97 on Internet Explorer. After completely clearing the cache and cookie files of the PC being used, the price remained $25.97 using the Netscape browser but had risen to $27.97 with Internet Explorer. Oddly enough, people using Lynx were simply given items gratis."
My
Limekiller