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Thoughts on IT, .Net, and everything else Tech

The iPhone 3G Revealed

clock July 1, 2008 11:20 by author Tom

So after all the $199 hoopla it turns out the price of the 3g iPhone is...no different than the price of existing iPhone's now

AT&T retail stores will be open at 8AM local time on July 11th, so be “iReady!” Existing customers who don’t qualify for an upgrade will have to shell out $399 and $499 for the corresponding iP3G model. Customers who don’t want to extend their current contract will pay $599 for the 8GB and $699 for the 16GB model.

Now let me say that I don't have a problem with them announcing $199 as the price even though that price requires a 2 year contract.  That's just marketing. 

But I do find two things a little disingenuous...

1.  They framed this as a price drop which it isn't.

2.  They waited until now to reveal how much it would be for those not eligible for an upgrade.  Since that group includes every existing iPhone user I think this counts as "stringing your existing customers along"

I think its debatable where the line is between good marketing and flat out lying but Apple's definitely right up against it with this (if they didn't cross it completely). 

I love my iPhone but as someone who hadn't owned an Apple product before this I'm constantly surprised by Apple's shoddy treatment of their customers. 

Addendum: Kudos to VentureBeat for catching this, the new iPhone 3g data plans don't include any text messaging.  Read about it here.



Why doesn't Google Care About You?

clock July 1, 2008 03:05 by author Tom

Michael Krigsman writes a post for ZDNet about Feedburner's recent 3 day outage.  For those who aren't bloggers Feedburner is a service operated by Google that allows you to track information about your RSS/Atom Feeds such as how many subscribers they have, what those subscribers are clicking on, etc...

In his post Mr. Krigsman says...

FeedBurner blog site statistics have been down for over two days with no word from Google despite numerous complaints from users. Does Google’s lack of response suggest something we don’t know?

...

In my view, Google’s cavalier attitude toward FeedBurner suggests that perhaps the service has been demoted to second-tier status despite the fact some FeedBurner services remain working. If so, that’s bad news for users. Google, any comment on this?

To be honest, I was surprised this issue didn't get more coverage in the blogosphere.  Such blatant mistreatment of customers, particularly vocal customers like bloggers, usually creates more of a storm than this. 

I don't know for a fact what is behind Google's lack of response.  But it reminds me of an issue that I don't think gets near enough attention and that's the fact that Web 2.0 companies, with their ad based revenue models, have no incentive to listen to their customers. 

Because unlike businesses in the past their money comes from a third party giving the consumer no pull.

Our lives are becoming more and more dependent on companies that don't answer to us in any way.  I actually posted on this a few months back.  At the time I said...

This is one of the biggest problems and least discussed consequences of Web 2.0's new "Advertisement Based Economy".  By being an intermediary between you and the service you are using the advertising company is preventing you from having any hold over the company that is actually providing you with a service.  Because of that you lose the ability to hold them accountable for providing that service poorly. 

It actually adds a lot of credence to the idea that nothing comes for free.

So the question is, what can be done?  People certainly don't want to start paying for something that is currently free and web sites have no reason to listen to users while the people with the ads are providing all the funding.  What needs to happen is the middle man (a.k.a. the advertiser) needs to start advocating for the user.

I still wish a system like this could be established but I'm less and less optimistic as time goes on.  Google's complete lack of not only contrition but response of any kind shows just how complacent people have become in regards to this. 

It makes me wonder though, with people relying more and more on these services and starting to put important data into them (Google Health for example) how long can this type of behavior be tolerated?  I have to think the consumer will stand up and complain at some point.



About Me

Hi, I’m Tom and I run the IT department for a non-profit agency which provides treatment to special-needs children. Though I will (like any blogger) comment on technology in general my main goal is to detail how I’m trying to use technology to help treat the children we serve and its my hope that blogging will allow me to connect with people who can help in that goal.

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