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>The price argument reminds me of Prior's Double Dark, a wonderful >Philadelphia-brewed beer available for $2 - $3 a six back in the days when >there were *no* drinkable American beers. Some marketing guy decided that >they'd sell more if they were priced and sold more like imports - >specifically Guinness - and all of a sudden the beer came in 4-paks which >cost $6. Within a year, no more Prior's in any form. So what was the >problem? >Ahead of their time? Misguided marketing? Recession of '82? From *my* >perspective as a loyal Prior's fan prior (;->) to their marketing suicide, >the whole thing stunk. They took a perfectly good product - one which had >basically no competitors - and $%#$$ed it over with a misguided marketing >strategy. Can you imagine how well they'd have done if they had just held >on >at the level they were at, and caught the micro-brewery wave? My gut >feeling >is the JamMan is a perfectly good product, reasonably priced even at >$350-400, that needed to wait for its market to develop. Dont worry too much. It looks like the Plex is holding this position (it actually IS mainly imported technology :-), and as you point out, its not the price that makes the success of such a product, but rather: uniqueness x smart marketing x time. So at the moment, helping Oberheim by demonstrating and explaining what it does is maybe the best we can do for the survival of the species (and my own :-). Matthias Oh, Greg just said it his way: > But lets not >waste time with this issue. It would be more constructive(and >interesting) >to discuss what everybody would like to see in the next generation of >dedicated(or not) looping technology. Maybe if we are all good on the >karmic scale Lexicon or Oberheim(or Roland or Alesis) might answer our >prayers. Thanks