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Re: OT: In Praise of Dos-Based Word Processors
- Subject: Re: OT: In Praise of Dos-Based Word Processors
- From: Harry Binswanger hb@xxxxxxxx
- Date: Fri, 16 May 2014 14:11:03 -0400
At 15/05/2014 13:50, you wrote:
Has there been any (non-electronic) good in human history whose cost has
dropped a million-fold? Maybe aluminum.
Tulips, although the history is murky, according to one of Wikipedia's
less bad articles. Mackay has two separate citations showing 2500 florins
for a single tulip bulb around 1635. The purchasing power of such a florin
is said to have been appx 10 Euros as valued in 2002. So: 1 tulip for
25,000 euros. It would be inconvenient but not at all impossible to buy
tulips at the rate of 40 per Euro today, so there's your million.
That's not *my* million, the bursting of the tulip bubble has nothing in
common with the lowering of costs of production for hard drives and for
electronics generally. One was a return to reality the other is a vastly
improving reality.
Orchids that are easy to mass-propogate are an excellent example of a
commodity where the first, unique, example, is worth a vast amount of
money, compared to what might be charged within a year or so for
subsequent identical replicants.
That's much closer: a difficult creation easily reproduced. But still, in
electronics, we are dealing with the new.