• Fontasia@feddit.nl
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    1 hour ago

    Demand goes down over time but the board expects increasing results. It’s the capitalism.

  • OpenPassageways@lemmy.zip
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    8 hours ago

    Strong anti-trust enforcement is the key. As long as the major cloud providers are actually competing, it shouldn’t be an issue.

    Price-fixers need to face real consequences, not like the slap on the wrist that they got for fixing the price of ebooks at 10$.

  • trolololol@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    In an e-mail to [Steve] Jobs, Cue attributed Random House’s capitulation in part to ‘the fact that I prevented an app from Random House from going live in the app store this week.’"

    Well we all knew those things happened but it’s the first time I see proof.

  • ChowJeeBai@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    This is what I don’t get. Progress and tech are supposed to make things cheaper and more efficient, not more expensive and resource hungry.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    eBooks and digital rentals should cost a fraction of their physical counterparts, but instead they cost more because of greed convenience.

    • Michal@programming.dev
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      10 hours ago

      Ebooks are less convenient because once you buy and read it you’re stuck with it and can’t resell.

      Books can be had second hand for dirt cheap, too. For ebook you’re paying full price.

    • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Printing a book on paper and distributing physical books isn’t the majority of the cost of a book. Should ebooks be cheaper? Yes should they cost a fraction of a paper book? No since most of the cost in publishing does not depend on the medium of distribution. Most of the cost is basically the salaries of the people they have to pay to get the book onto the market (the writer, editor, marketing, etc) it doesn’t matter if it’s digital or physical these costs stay the same. Publishers basically lose money with the majority of the books they publish and make most of their money with the few hits they release each year.

    • ShawiniganHandshake@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      The expensive part of making books is not the paper. My wife is an independent author and between editing, typesetting, cover design, etc. she spent about $1500 to publish each of her books.

      While she could price her books at $1, that would present her with a few problems.

      Firstly, people often value things based on what they’ve paid for them, so pricing your book too low makes people assume it is of poor quality.

      Secondly, having positive reviews is extremely important for indie authors because the Almighty Algorithm will reward you or punish you based on the book’s rating. Other indie authors she has talked to have seen a noticable decline in their book’s rating after Amazon put it on sale and a bunch of people who might not have otherwise read it started buying copies. If you’ve ever worked retail or food service, you probably know that bargain hunters are often the people who are least reasonable and hardest to please. If the book is too cheap, you may attract an audience that harms its reputation.

      Finally, trying to sell 2000+ copies of a book is pretty daunting for small authors and that’s about what it would take to break even at $1 per copy.

      Could big publishers and well known authors sell books for a buck? Probably. But for the majority of authors who aren’t making their living by writing and only sell a few hundred copies ever, that’s not really realistic.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Those are reasonable statements, but it doesn’t explain why the digital equivalents cost MORE than their physical counterparts. Especially considering there’s no manufacturing, distribution, shipping, storage, etc… Sure, servers and bandwidth cost money, but nowhere near what an entire physical distribution chain costs. It’s pennies on the dollar.

        • ShawiniganHandshake@sh.itjust.works
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          23 hours ago

          I can’t think of a recent time where I’ve seen an eBook that cost more than the paperback but I haven’t been looking specifically. In my experience, the eBook is usually a buck or two cheaper than the print version.

          I’m open to being wrong about this.

          • trolololol@lemmy.world
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            22 hours ago

            All the books I’ve seen in Amazon are like this

            I don’t buy at Amazon, usually when I do is Google or Kobo, and the prices are similar to Amazons sometimes slightly cheaper.

  • drathvedro@lemm.ee
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    23 hours ago

    Cloud costs are going down

    ¿Huh?

    Companies often have less new stuff to add

    They never run out of stuff to add. Give any company enough resources and you would see weird and completely unrelated stuff attached to their products. I kid you not, I can apparently get a vet appointment in a taxi app, and my bank is now selling clothes and… car parts? While the bank part of the app literally has no option to filter out only incoming transactions. Priorities, I guess…

    • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      Yeah companies need to stop being allowed to be multiple industries.

      Like why does every department store have a credit card now? They should be using their profits to pay their employees, not loaning it out at insane interest rates.

      • casadia880@lemmy.ml
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        20 hours ago

        Usually those cards are serviced by a bank, the department store doesn’t loan its money. I know a lot of stores use Synchrony bank

  • madjo@feddit.nl
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    1 day ago

    I was renting a water heater. It had been installed in my house in the early 1980s. And the rental contract had been handed down from home owner to home owner.

    But there was never an attempt at maintenance, even upon request I got told “there’s no need, there’s nothing to maintain on it.” but they kept increasing the rental cost year over year “because of inflation”. It had been paid off for decades! What do you mean you need to charge more? What exactly am I paying for? My water heater is just a number in your books. You have zero costs for it!

    • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      … Why would you rent a way heater, in a home you own? Is the house a school or something???

      • madjo@feddit.nl
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        23 hours ago

        I’ve since replaced it with a water heater I bought outright. For a while I wasn’t aware that you could just buy a heater. So I just gritted my teeth and paid up.

        But my point was the weird and pointless increase of fees.

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      21 hours ago

      I’ve read your response to others that you bought the replacement outright, but I wonder if the original renter was about to sell their house and needed a water heater. Saddling the future with this debt could be cheaper than buying it outright.

      • madjo@feddit.nl
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        12 hours ago

        I don’t know. It might be that it was usual at that time to rent those things than to buy them. My parents also had a rented water heater when they owned a home, which is why I didn’t even think twice about it.

        I don’t know how expensive those boilers were in the 80s.

      • phoneymouse@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        Probably this… if you’re not going to benefit from the new water heater, you’d probably be tempted to pass it off to the next owner. Renting is a way to do that.

      • madjo@feddit.nl
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        23 hours ago

        I have since replaced it with a water heater I bought outright. Sadly a heat pump isn’t an option in my home. So it’s a simple electric 80liter water heater.

  • mycodesucks@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Software gets more expensive over time when you write it like spaghetti coded crap in a “move fast and break things” environment where you build so much technical debt that you can’t touch anything without breaking 5 other things, and suddenly even simple changes take hundreds of developer hours, which you don’t have because half your team is fighting bugs.

    Luckily all of our most critical services run on well-developed platforms that get the time and resources they need to be durable and maintainable over time. (biggest /s I’ve ever written)

  • laranis@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    There was another thread recently about what happened in your life that made you no longer feel like a child. I think for me one of those things was realizing that the price of things has very little to do at all with the cost of creating that thing.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Price = Cost of Materials + (Middle Man + Middle Man + Middle Man + Middle Man + Middle Man + Middle Man) + Cost of Labor.

      It’s Econ 101

      • drosophila@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        19 hours ago

        Nah, the cost of labor + materials + distribution is the minimum price of an item. The actual price in practice will be that price + whatever the manufacturer can get away with charging.

        What determines the premium they can get away with is whether or not alternative goods exist and whether or not the consumers are informed of them, motivated to seek them out, and capable of making the switch.

      • mlg@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Macroecnomics is just all the different ways we ruin microeconomics

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Marco is microecon when you hit the boundaries of the closed system.

          The problem with modern Western application of Macro is that it just tries to scale up Micro to the size of countries and continents. No consideration for limited lifetime resources, negative externalities, or long term growth rates under deteriorating conditions.

          True proper macro economics asks questions about peak oil and pension funding and the real cost of global military conflicts, rather than obsessing itself with next quarter growth figures at the GDP scale.

          • CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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            6 hours ago

            Non-economist: the economy must be shit because I can barely afford bread.
            Economist: UR WRONG, GDP GO UP

            That’s more or less the state of discourse right now and it’s embarrassing.

            • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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              5 hours ago

              Economist: UR WRONG, GDP GO UP

              There’s a guy I love, named Richard D. Wolff, who loves to joke about how colleges insist on having an Economics School and a Business School, when these should theoretically be the same field of study. Then he’ll bring up a few anecdotes over professors from the respective schools arguing over this or that point of orthodoxy.

              My favorite is “The Economic Calculation Problem”, a thing that Chicago School Economists swear by, but which executives at vertically integrated firms like Exxon, Walmart, and Amazon defy on a daily basis. There’s a great book called “The People’s Republic of Walmart” that suggests a lot of the underlying computational problems of economics have been resolved within these mega-corps, using the same theories and policies once practiced by Soviet-Era states.

              That’s the real divide between Macro In-Theory and In-Practice. One is functionally just state propaganda, while the other is the hard math of balancing a global supply of finite resources and labor while generating consistently larger surpluses.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Price is whichever is greater: what they think the highest cost*adoption will be or the minimum people will do it for.

    • Overshoot2648@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      This is actually the reason why taxes don’t increase luxury item costs as the cost is set to the market demand rather than from supply. In fact, the benefits from taxes help people afford more products in a virtuous cycle. It’s also the reason tariffs or taxes on raw goods are so bad as you actually are creating dead weight loss and driving down demand which can be useful or detrimental depending on why someone needs that product.

      • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        id argue enshittification is a consequence of monopoly capitalism, and not a separate thing.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        One consequence of monopoly capitalism is businesses pursuing growth in revenue more aggressively than growth in user base.

        When the market is saturated, all you can do to pursue growth is to increase unit margin. This eventually leads to production of “fictitious capital” as a stand in for real capital (as paper assets cost virtually nothing to produce).

        Das Kapital goes into lengthy detail about this process. Specifically, the “how much does it cost to make a coat” chapter gets into it in (exhaustive) detail.

        • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Sure. But it’s a consequence of monopolisation. Once you break up the monopolies, enshittification will no longer be economically viable.

          • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 day ago

            Monopolization becomes inevitable in a capitalist economy since the wealthy are still the ones with power, and they will always seek to increase their wealth by any means necessary.

            Even in a heavilly regulated form of capitalism, the wealthy will do everything in their power to slowly strip regulations over a period of time where they think people won’t notice and attempt to move public opinion towards the wealthy class’s benefit via propaganda.

          • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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            1 day ago

            “You’re not talking about Sprite, but about sugary soft drinks” <- that’s you

              • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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                1 day ago

                I was giving a name to a specific feature of capitalism and you were all “umm actually”-ing me that I’m talking about capitalism.

                That’s like:

                Me: “I really like this chocolate croissant” You: “Actually, you’re talking about a pastry 🤓”

    • Clent@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Enshittification has nothing to do with pricing.

      It’s about market capture and the resulting lack of choices allowing market holders to maximize profits by degrading product performance. This can occur even when the product has no price.

      • Cornelius_Wangenheim@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        That’s part of enshittification. Step 2 of enshittification is to entice in business buyers with low prices and changes that meet their needs. Step 3 is to cut costs and start price gouging to maximize profits.

        • Clent@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Google is free to use. It still is. There is no price.

          Facrbook, fee to use. Still is.

          Both have been enshittified. There is no price being gouged.

          The services they do sell are to advertisers, those costs are not being cut, they are focused on improving their targeting to attract more revenue.

          Enshittification is a very simply concept; only product quality is measured. There might be price gouging but turn doesn’t have to be.

          • Cornelius_Wangenheim@lemmy.world
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            24 hours ago

            You’re missing half the point of enshittification. I’m just going to quote Doctorow directly:

            “Here is how platforms die: first, they are good to their users; then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers; finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, they die. I call this enshittification, and it is a seemingly inevitable consequence arising from the combination of the ease of changing how a platform allocates value, combined with the nature of a “two-sided market”, where a platform sits between buyers and sellers, hold each hostage to the other, raking off an ever-larger share of the value that passes between them.”

          • Zink@programming.dev
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            1 day ago

            I think the price being gouged by Google and Facebook enshittification is your time being wasted for their own benefit. Your time and attention is what they sell after all.

      • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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        1 day ago

        I’d say that pricing is part of the deal which can get worse. Claiming that it’s not enshittification is useless nitpicking, IMHO.

  • passepartout@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    You could also try to write modular software and use standardized interfaces to prevent vendor lock in. Haha who am i kidding…

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      Yeah but my boss told me I should use the magic API because it’s a panacea and will solve all of our problems.

    • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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      The problem (outside of competence and the fact that most people only really understand one tool) is that they’re deliberately architected in ways that make it difficult to operate on them the same way. They’re not just different function calls; they want you to make completely different assumptions about how to do things.

  • secret300@lemmy.sdf.org
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    18 hours ago

    Disclaimer: I am very drunk

    But like idk. I feel like cost going down on physical items makes sense to a point. But I’ve hosted a few services and that shit got harder and more involved the longer it went on. Maybe that’s just a skill issue tho. Love to hear your thoughts

    • fallingcats@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 hours ago

      Yes it gets harder, but it doesn’t get 10x harder with 10x users. It should scale somewhat logarithmically. With millions of users that makes it still much cheaper to operate per user than with a thousand.

    • WanakaTree@lemm.ee
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      17 hours ago

      I host an ever growing system in the cloud. Everything you build needs to be maintained and monitored, and the more users you have, the more features they demand.

      You can still spread cost out across more users, but it’s not like the software is just “done” and sits there being used

  • Chewbaccabra@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Thought it was interesting that no one mentioned Terraform or OpenTofu. Then checked the community I was in.