Gameboy70
Member

Registered: Oct 1999
Location: Metro Station, Hollywood and Highland
Posts: 1018 |
Handspring's explanation is valid to me. As the company states in its press release, real costs are incurred for the load on the proxy servers. That plus the fact that Handspring paid over $16M in stock to acquire Bluelark Systems pretty much made it a matter of when, not if, Handspring would charge for Blazer. Anyone should've seen the writing on the wall when ProxyWeb shut down its servers. The worst part of Handspring's new policy is not offering a demo. Many new Visor owners will never know if Blazer is a better browser than the competition, and won't spent $20 blindly, nor should they.
This isn't analogous to Sun buying StarOffice or AOL buying Netscape, both of which are loss leaders that gain value as portals to the companies' other products and service. Handspring is a hardware company, and keeps its stake in software development to a minimum.
The days of free software aren't necessarily over. Cheaper and free alternatives of competitive grade will always exert downward pressure against price gouging. But it's hard to make a competitive browser at any price that will run as fast as a proxy-filtered one, so Handspring has some leverage here, at least until CDMA networks (I use Sprint PCS for wireless net access) are upgraded to 2.5/3G -- then the difference will be negligible.
But as a consumer, I'm always looking for what's in my best interest, not Handspring's, so right now BrowseIt's the better deal: free, and no MSN default!
Last edited by Gameboy70 on 05-17-2001 at 08:49 PM
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