Yeah, but if they don't ship the paper with a cd it'll be much easier to dispose of. And it would not need an exciting strategy involving marketing-English.
They want to create a unique interactive off-demand pseudo-resource solution for today's well-informed computing specialist. (in English: They want to sell stuff that no one else sells, that no one wants or needs and that consists of theoretically recyclable materials to people who can barely use Windows XP Home.)
BTW, when will AOL start shipping newspapers with their CDs?
Yeah, but if they don't ship the paper with a cd it'll be much easier to dispose of. And it would not need an exciting strategy involving marketing-English.
They want to create a unique interactive off-demand pseudo-resource solution for today's well-informed computing specialist. (in English: They want to sell stuff that no one else sells, that no one wants or needs and that consists of theoretically recyclable materials to people who can barely use Windows XP Home.)
BTW, when will AOL start shipping newspapers with their CDs?