A "5 seater" car, where some critical part of the car occupies 3 seats so you only have 2 for people.
A box of 100 staples, where 64 are used to hold the box together, so you only get to use 36
A 50 inch plasma TV, where the bezel accounted for 32 inches of that.
A car advertised as getting 30MPG, but when you put seats, seat belts, a heater, air conditioning and a radio in there it only gets 20 MPG
It feels a lot like getting ripped off to me.
Obviously we're power users, so we're willing to dive into this and understand that when you buy a 64GB device, you don't get that much storage. Do you think the general public understands that?
No, I think his analogies are terrible because this an issue with people because of the amount of the free space, not the general concept. Like there is no outrage when we lose 10-20% of our space to the system. But in his analogies, those are all cases where no one would tolerate anything more than 0% lossage.
Not that my vegetable analogy is not terrible, but at least it's a case where lossage is normal, and it's just excessive lossage that we would be upset about.
Harddrive space is consumed like flour or sugar is, not as eggplants are.
Nobody says "I want n pounds of eggplant", rather they say "I want n eggplants". They then pay based on weight, for the convenience of the grocer.
On the other hand, you don't want "n bags of flour" but rather "n pounds of flour". If flour were being sold such that more than a miniscule single-digit percentage of that weight were actually packaging, people would be justifiably upset.
Car seating is DMV in the US. And yes, they have specs - you can't claim it seats more than average amounts of humans without backing that up by claiming they're unusually small.
Vegetables are WYSIWIG; this Surface thing less so.
It is a bit as if they sell you a one pound coconut with a sticker "a pound of coconut milk" on it.
Historically, companies have been forced to change their ways for less (prime example: monitor sizes used to be measured on the display area, but that grew to 'visible part of the CRT' and from there to 'CRT diagonal', and, IIRC, 'diagonal extended to the edge of the housing')
That's a good point, but I think we need to also consider variability between similar products. For example, whilst a lobster might only be 20% edible, that is what people have come to expect of lobsters. All lobsters roughly obey that ratio.
In this case, some tablets are delivering on 80 or 90% of their promised capacity whilst others are only managing the vicinity of 25%.
I would imagine peanuts in the shell probably have close to half the weight being the inedible shells. What about a coconut? I'm sure there is some kind of vegetable product where you don't eat 2/3 of it.
For instance; Peas. I hate peas, so I consider them well short of one-third edible.
Maybe the Surface Pro should be called the Microsoft Eat Your Peas.
Good point, though I would argue that Vegetables are low tech and people have been buying them for hundreds (thousands?) of years, so the laymen clearly understands what he's getting and not getting.
All of my examples are high tech and recent, to the point where a lot of the customers would never have bought such a product before, thus have no idea what they are getting and not getting.
For these complicated products, it needs to be spelled out more clearly, and maybe even regulated as suggested.
(I've never bought a TV, and I'm still confused about how they're measured, for example)
What? Where do they do that? If they did, then that's pretty crazy. How can they say the "bridge can support 5 tons", but it would only support 1? That would destroy the bridge when some large vehicle tried to pass over it.
Actually, the system they use measures only the useful load supported by the bridge, not the road surface and other bridge components. It's really quite elegant.
Here, Calvin's dad can explain it better than I can:
I think the TV bezel example is spot on. But the problem with analogies is if you are of the opposing point of view, then you look for differences rather than similarities, so no analogy would work.
A "5 seater" car, where some critical part of the car occupies 3 seats so you only have 2 for people.
A box of 100 staples, where 64 are used to hold the box together, so you only get to use 36
A 50 inch plasma TV, where the bezel accounted for 32 inches of that.
A car advertised as getting 30MPG, but when you put seats, seat belts, a heater, air conditioning and a radio in there it only gets 20 MPG
It feels a lot like getting ripped off to me.
Obviously we're power users, so we're willing to dive into this and understand that when you buy a 64GB device, you don't get that much storage. Do you think the general public understands that?