iPad UK Pricing Confirmed; Apple UK Tax Applied
The iPad will be available in the UK and eight other countries from 28 May 2010; both models will be available for pre-order on 10 May. Reader marcopolo007uk adds a note from iPad-Review.co.uk with pricing: "WiFi Models: 16GB / 32GB / 64GB — £429 / £499 / £599. 3G versions: 16GB / 32GB / 64GB — £529 / £599 / £699. These are a little higher than some had guessed... The Apple Tax stings the UK consumer again." At the current exchange rate, these prices are right around 150% of those offered in the US.
Another flamebait iPad post! Another chance for me to say iPads are a waste of money!
"Su-su-suck it, bitch!" -Jimmy
Living With a Nerd
What's the problem again?
VAT
And how is this Apple's problem?
How is a difference of £75 ($110) "really close"?
"It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
and so they should! We like our public servies
if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
At least in the UK you're getting a better return for your tax pounds. You spend a smaller percentage of your GDP on military and you get nationalized healthcare.
Steve Jobs is writing a new story. "The Emperors New Computing Device"
Apple is glad to see such free advertising! This is consumerism crap, not slashdot-worthy "stuff that matters" content...
And free houses for all the Chavs. I'll take my nano-tech, space laser, military-industrial complex.
It's not 150%, it's 126%. And the UK price includes 17.5% VAT which Apple would have to send straight to Gordon Brown's tax collectors if he hadn't just been thrown out (I think he is refusing to leave, but thank heavens he will), whereas the US price doesn't include US sales tax.
From our perspective, the good news is that my mother pulled through, both her and my uncle are on medicines for the rest of her life (free, of course) and my mother has just finished the chemotherapy, so she's feeling a little fragile atm, but she made it; anything else is irrelevant.
Simon.
Physicists get Hadrons!
Wait, no, I retract my previous reply to you! It's not a fair point!
I got myself a little confused, but you're comparing apples to oranges (no pun intended!).
My initial comparison was untaxed price to untaxed price, and the mark up is between 3% and 8% there. You're then talking about adding US sales tax and comparing that taxed price to the untaxed UK price.
Worse storage, Worse flexibility, Worse software selection, Worse productivity, there isn't anything on the ipad you can't do on a netbook, but there are a lot of things you can do on a netbook that you can't do on an ipad. The ipad isn't a tablet. Tablets have been out for years. Tablets are computers with a touch interface, mostly without keyboards. The ipad is a presentation device. It isn't made for computing. Writing a paper on an ipad would just be painful. It's made to view web pages, watch a movie, listen to music, or play some light-weight games/apps. It's not a good design for a creative platform.
if (it != oneThing) it = another;
The iPad is built from the ground up to be what it is.
Yeah! Cummon guys, listen to him! I don't know of any other tablet on the market that was created by making a phone bigger and taking away the phone call capability!
It's a Giant iPod Touch... it's got the iPod Touch guts, bolted into a big screen.. no ground up here... no ground breaking OS enhancements... I'm not saying it's overpriced, but it was emphatically built to be a large iPod Touch.
Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
1) There's plenty of people who would struggle to get $5k together
2) He also paid insurance premiums, and the premiums may go up and the exclusions may become more significant because of his history now
3) In the UK, he'd have paid £0 at point of need, not $2.5k or 5k
4) How do you know for sure that Duke provides better treatment? What do you mean: better outcomes? better experience? safer? all three? Where's the evidence for your assertion?
I always consider sales tax in the US to be a bit of a non-issue on things like this, since (unless I'm mistaken) avoiding it is pretty trivial, by ordering online from a distributor in another state.
Which is why pricing in the US is such an insidious trap. Displaying shelf prices as tax-free amounts to deception. And the whole "easy to avoid by buying out-of-state" is almost criminally inefficient. It encourages waste by having items shipped across the country for no good reason, resulting in more pollution.
It would be nice to see some tax reform, but I doubt that will ever happen, as people would rather exploit the loopholes than have an honest system that might cost a few bucks more (but also save a few bucks elsewhere).
... and then they built the supercollider.
From the wiki on life expectancy:
Average lifespan at birth in the UK: 79.4 years
Average lifespan at birth in the US: 78.2 years
So, minor win for the UK's far inferior system there. Now, from the wiki on infant mortality rates:
Infant deaths per 1000 live births / under 5's deaths per 1000 live births in the UK: 4.8 / 6.0
Infant deaths per 1000 live births / under 5's deaths per 1000 live births in the US: 6.3 / 7.8
Another one called for the Kingdom, there. Again, not a huge difference, but pretty significant if you're a parent of 1.8 out of 1000 children. So, the question seems to boil down to a choice between expensive good care or cheap effective care.
Be smart, help people!