Sometimes, free costs you more. At my job, I was using a borrowed iBook.
Total cost: the iBook .  Almost all of my coworkers used PC's. Total cost:
the PC's and approx. $1500. per computer for the computer consultant.

That's one way to compete with free, in general.

OTOH, being often without much money to burn, I know well that a working
computer without cost (especially to a bright grad student willing and able
to spend the time and effort to keep it going) can beat having only a modest
Mac built when Apple was in the Jurassic period.

Bruce

on 1/30/01 2:15 PM, Alan R. Houtzer at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> on 1/30/01 10:17 AM, Allen Watson at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> What can you say to compete with
>> "free"? 
> 
> 
> That's easy!:  "works right" competes with "free" and wins me over every
> time.  Cheap junk is never really cheap -- it's just junk.
> 

--  
Bruce Klutchko

[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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