@f94sbu
I find it pretty amusing that you seem to think that the computer industry works totally different from the rest of the commercial industry.
First thing, support is always the responsibility of the person/company/entity that sold you a product and since MS never has sold me a product directly, it is never their responsibility to support me. Support is supposed to go through the retailer. Why else would they be allowed to add 30% on the price of a product?
For getting the product into the hands of the user? To cover the costs of the administration involved in the retail operation, plus a profit margin for the retailer?
If you honestly think every retailer is responsible for giving first line technical support on every software product they sell you're totally mad. The costs involved would be astronomoical.
There is another issue you're all ignoring. First line support includes not only call vetting but problem ownership. Handling this is both time consuming and takes considerable manpower. Don't you realise how much companies that provide this service for the corporate sector charge their customers, and for limited periods? For the retail sector to do the same it would add at least $200 or so for every single software item sold, no matter what the original cost. Operating systems, because of their complexity, would be specialy prohibitive.
I honestly think most of you haven't got a clue as to what's involved in "first line support" for a product like this.
Second, if you think that you can go and ask for a refund of the licence price, try to figure out what the licence cost really is. Cost is never a fixed number, it varies quite abit depending on volume. So, you will never be able to determine the cost of the non OEM part in that case.
Like I said, the legal precedent already exists.
Regarding the superbundle, you said that Genesi owns the software. What?
Doesn't the superbundle contain lots of different software licenced from lots of different developers. Please correct me if I am wrong, but your logic doesn't work here imho.
Genesi supply the software. They are the publisher of the bundle. (If I said they owned the individual software copyrights then I apologise for being misleading, but I don't think I did). Therefore it is impossible to prove that they charge their customers for the bundle. In other words the theory would be that Genesi absorb any license costs and supply it to the user for
free.
This is not the case with OEM's whose contracts with the software suppliers spells out that the vendors charge for it, specially when, as you say, the fee is closely tied to volume.
Look, let's let it go and agree to disagree. You're not going to convince me without
far better researched arguments than you've come up with so far, and I keep having to repeat myself in replying to you. The thread is clearly going nowhere and should be put to rest now we've all had our say.