Where I work we lease pc's for two years at a time. Will this make a large difference in the proce of the lease?
Will the initial cost of purchasing rights to use the software go up consierably? If so will the oems eat the cost to keep up sales or will they try to pass it on to customers?
But the point is that they are not the only show in town. Those TV and radio stations have other places to go and get advertising.
When AOL\Time Warner use their dominance in one market to take control of another market, that is when they break the law.
Same as MS cramming IE down the consumers throats, yes one can go and download an alternative browser, but most of the general public are either don't know they can, are to scared to, or just don't have the ambition to do so.
Like wise, most people will only see advertising for AOL and will figure if they are the only ones advertising, then I should use AOL.
I do.
21" monitor
20" TV
The obvious answer is to run the other 10% :)
sorry, price not proce
Where I work we lease pc's for two years at a time. Will this make a large difference in the proce of the lease?
Will the initial cost of purchasing rights to use the software go up consierably? If so will the oems eat the cost to keep up sales or will they try to pass it on to customers?
But the point is that they are not the only show in town. Those TV and radio stations have other places to go and get advertising. When AOL\Time Warner use their dominance in one market to take control of another market, that is when they break the law. Same as MS cramming IE down the consumers throats, yes one can go and download an alternative browser, but most of the general public are either don't know they can, are to scared to, or just don't have the ambition to do so. Like wise, most people will only see advertising for AOL and will figure if they are the only ones advertising, then I should use AOL.