![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
From Spaceflightnow:
"A small spacecraft carrying priceless samples of the sun crashed into the Utah desert today [...], bringing an [end to an] innovative $264 million mission [...]. It's not easy to contradict yourself in the first sentence alone, but they managed. [Priceless, in english, means "impossible to put a price tag on". However, this is exactly what they did in the second part of the sentence.] Lou Scheffer |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 8 Sep 2004 15:54:25 -0700, Louis Scheffer wrote:
From Spaceflightnow: "A small spacecraft carrying priceless samples of the sun crashed into the Utah desert today [...], bringing an [end to an] innovative $264 million mission [...]. It's not easy to contradict yourself in the first sentence alone, but they managed. [Priceless, in english, means "impossible to put a price tag on". However, this is exactly what they did in the second part of the sentence.] Lou Scheffer Not really. The samples are priceless. The mission cost $264M. Just like the cost of mining diamonds doesn't give you the price of the diamond. The demand for the diamonds determine what people are wiling to pay.. -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 9 Sep 2004 00:16:05 -0700, Louis Scheffer wrote:
New companies will enter the field, and the price will eventually settle out at the cost to mine them + some profit for the miners. And in fact diamonds are not priceless - you can go to any one of a thousand jewelers and they will have them on display, with prices, and you can take one home today if you so desire. So in a capitalist society, the only things that are priceless are those where you can't get another one no matter how much you are willing to pay. So a work by a dead artist, or a one of a kind fossil, might be priceless. So you think the price Microsofts software pays for what it costs to produce it? Wake up! There is a reason he is the worlds richest man.. No, price is regulated by what peaple are willing to pay. -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Althoughstad wrote:
On 9 Sep 2004 00:16:05 -0700, Louis Scheffer wrote: New companies will enter the field, and the price will eventually settle out at the cost to mine them + some profit for the miners. And in fact diamonds are not priceless - you can go to any one of a thousand jewelers and they will have them on display, with prices, and you can take one home today if you so desire. So in a capitalist society, the only things that are priceless are those where you can't get another one no matter how much you are willing to pay. So a work by a dead artist, or a one of a kind fossil, might be priceless. So you think the price Microsofts software pays for what it costs to produce it? Wake up! There is a reason he is the worlds richest man.. No, price is regulated by what peaple are willing to pay. In fact, you can push the economics even further. Microsoft is a quasi-monopoly[1], so they can set the price to whatever they want. New software is a highly needed commodity, demand being driven by bugs and lack of features in previous versions... People are willing to pay hundreds of $ for versions of Microsoft software for economics principles too: The apparent time and other ressources envisioned by them as needed for learning and adapt to other tools out there, such as Linux, outweighs the immediate relief of paying the price set by Microsoft to continue using their products instead. This trend is eroding in Asia, where universal Microsoft software pirating and spreading use of Linux and other technologies drive Microsoft to offer real cheap versions of WinXP for as little as 30$... [1] Whenever a competing product goes against Microsoft, either MS "includes" the "features" in it's next product iteration, or offers the same functions freely... Like Internet Explorer, Windows Media Player, and soon enough some type of Googlish search engine embedded and integrated in the OS... More open doors to vulnerabilities if you ask me... |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Remy Villeneuve wrote:
In fact, you can push the economics even further. Microsoft is a quasi-monopoly[1], so they can set the price to whatever they want. No, they can't. Push the price too high and folks simply won't upgrade. (Their recent increase in license prices have already caused companies to not upgrade for example.) D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Louis Scheffer wrote: But in fact the cost of mining diamonds *does* determine their price, assuming capitalism works. Actually a bad example, because diamond prices are largely set by cartel manipulations rather than by actual cost. (The geological conditions that yield significant numbers of gem-quality diamonds are scarce, and a few companies control all major sources.) If there is a big demand for diamonds, willing to pay more than it costs to mine them, then there is a potential for profit. New companies will enter the field, and the price will eventually settle out at the cost to mine them + some profit for the miners. Only if you assume that the new companies can negotiate mineral rights at suitable sites. That assumption falls down when suitable sites are rare enough that it is possible to achieve monopoly/oligopoly control of them and simply refuse to admit new companies. So in a capitalist society, the only things that are priceless are those where you can't get another one no matter how much you are willing to pay. Bear in mind that while that was the *original* meaning of the word, for many years now it has had a secondary meaning of "precious or unusually valuable". Quibbling about this is silly. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Genesis Crash - Problem uncovered in '01??? | Ted A. Nichols II | Amateur Astronomy | 0 | September 8th 04 10:30 PM |
NASA to capture fiery Genesis re-entry with 'eyes in the sky' (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | September 5th 04 07:02 PM |
NASA Genesis Spacecraft on Final Lap Toward Home | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 0 | May 6th 04 01:39 AM |
Milky Way's Big Bang | Giovanni | Astronomy Misc | 30 | January 6th 04 10:32 AM |
A new and different "What If" -- WI N1/L3 program not cancelled | Ami Silberman | History | 64 | December 29th 03 06:19 PM |