Randall Reetz wrote > The idea that the customer services manager of a company would enlist > that company's own customers in a public debate over the merits of that > company's product and the rather easy to debase claims it made of its > product... Well it just feels a little icky. I am a huge fan of xtalk > and any bridge that can be built between intent and the horrors of > programming. That is a professional opinion, a philosophy. When I > purchase a product, that decision, and the money that is exchanged is > my argument for that product, and should be sufficient to pay for any > PR the company uses to attract other customers. And to ask for help > without explaining how that decision to ask for customer help was made > (and why) or at a minimum also venturing your own attempt at the same > debate seems a tad unfair. Choosing a tool, especially in programming > where endless hours are eaten up thereafter, well that is argument in > itself. Use it! Tell the world how many rev users there are. If > someone, unabated, wants to defend your products in public debate, so > be it. But to ask this of your own customers? If the product were > free, and if you were an unpaid volunteer, well maybe.
Break your thoughts into paragraphs please ;-) My eyes glosses over. Aloha from Hawaii, Jim Bufalini _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
