Simon, I think you misunderstand what we do (or our raison d'etre).  Not 
everyone using your software wants to pay for it.  We help those people pay for 
it by paying for something they ARE willing to pay for -- like flowers for 
mothers day, clothes from the Gap, etc.  We're really not doing anything 
nefarious and this is a win-win.  We've had 60 million consumers go through 
this.

Great example -- check out Roku.com.  They offer you $20 off a Roku player if 
you sign up for Netflix (which works with a Roku player) and we power this for 
them.

Apple offers you a few hundred dollars off an iPhone if you sign up for AT&T, 
too;)

It's your call whether you want to use us but this is really the same idea as 
iPhone/AT&T but with much better reception;)

Alex

--- In [email protected], Simon <macdevelo...@...> wrote:
>
> Yes, it was a FYI...
> 
> It's no different to buying a book from Amazon and getting suggestions...
> the video on the OpenCandy website is self-explanatory.  They make a
> recommendation during the install process, and the user can skip the
> recommendation.  If the software in the OpenCandy catalogue is high quality
> and recommendations are relevant, it could work quite well.
> 
> I certainly feel more comfortable with it than something like TrialPay,
> where a customer who wants to purchase software ends up buying flowers and
> signing up for a gym...
> 
> --Simon
> 
> 
> On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 2:13 AM, Gary L. Wade
> <garyw...@...>wrote:
> 
> >
> >
> > DUDE! BREATHE!
> >
> > I may not like ads either, but this is just an FYI posting, not necessarily
> > a recommendation or a push to use it. If you don't like it, don't use it.
> > I probably wouldn't use it either, but that doesn't mean I'm going to throw
> > away a perfectly good (and maybe free) application just because an ad
> > showed
> > up in my installer. Occasionally, a good ad will pique my interest, so I
> > would not consider such an ad as evil.
> >
> > By the way, if you've used software for any length of time, you'll notice
> > that lots of big-named products have ad-like screens (albeit for their own
> > products) in their installers, and people aren't throwing away those
> > products.
> >
> > If an installer is going to take a long time to do something, it's
> > perfectly
> > acceptable to keep the user occupied with something more than a progress
> > bar
> > or spinning cursor.
> >
> >
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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