a better analogy for the warranty discussion?
Peter da Silva
peter at ficc.ferranti.com
Fri Mar 22 04:58:14 AEST 1991
In article <8503 at rsiatl.Dixie.Com> jgd at Dixie.Com (John G. DeArmond) writes:
> peter at ficc.ferranti.com (Peter da Silva) writes:
> >And what would happen if you took your old Datsun or your K&R1 back and
> >demanded your money back because you weren't satisfied?
> If I were the Datsun dealer? Why I'd cheerfully give him his money back
> because a) the car is now worth more as a collectors' item than it cost
> new b) I'd know that the use of his money had made me many time over as
> much in the 17 years and c) I'd know that I could generate enough local
> media attention because of such an unusual transaction that I'd make any
> losses back in short order. I can see the headlines now: "Car dealer
> refunds disgruntled owner's money after 17 years."
Right. I can see that in living color.
You'd be laughed out of the showroom.
How about a 1 year old Nissan, then? Can you get your money back on that?
Even if the Odometer shows it spent the whole time in your garage?
> Of course, you did not ask what the gating function would be in this
> instance. I'm sure that with a bit of thought, an appropriate function
> could be devised to limit the car dealers' exposure.
OK, how about explaining this term, "gating function", a bit. Sounds like
a limitation on your unlimited warantee.
--
Peter da Silva. `-_-' peter at ferranti.com
+1 713 274 5180. 'U` "Have you hugged your wolf today?"
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