@Andrzej Drozd, post #64
@Daclaw, post #74
@powerzx, post #79
I want an A5000 machine and I wanted one for many years now. It is about time it arrived.
Think outside the box and look for new customers. When somebody types "Amiga A5000" in a search engine I want it to return results for the Cyrus Plus-based systems. When they search for "Amiga A3000" I want it to return the Classic Amiga 3000 links. The two should go hand in hand and display a unified front to the world.
That's a good point. But... wouldn't they rather type Amiga 5000? What comes up then? As far as I understand search engines, if there isn't an Amiga 5000 (as it is called AmigaOne... and not Amiga) it won't find it anyway. It then rather depends how websites/other users call the beast. Therefor the more people call it Amiga 5000 (instead of AmigaOne 5000) the better, right? Concluding: If we would call that beast just AmigaOne 5000, then there is a high possibility that people refer to it as "Amiga 5000", right? Correct me if I am wrong on my theory?
Further more, do you think there are more people buying the beast, if a search engine will present Cyrus base System when you enter Amiga 5000?
Search engines are also not as literate as you might think. Once something becomes popular the built-in spell checkers will start making suggestions as well. Only if you add special characters like quotation marks and plus signs do search engines take you absolutely literally.
I say consistency be damned as long as we are selling more units to new users.
@wawrzon, post #80
I say consistency be damned as long as we are selling more units to new users.
@jubi, post #83
Jednym słowem głupota + pazerność.Haha dobre, pazerność to chyba w przypadku MS i innych zarobionych firm, które mają mało i mało, bez względu
@Radek_Cz, post #84
@powerzx, post #89