I don't know what to think about what your 'kind' car salesmen call 'cashback', are there really any people who don't understand that they must pay back the money they 'get for free'?
By the way, 'cashback' is illegal in Norway, and thank you for that. :-)
>>>>The msdn page referred to the site
http://www.foxtoolbox.com where vfp9 can be pre-ordered.
>>>>
>>>>On that site you find advertised that
vfp9 is given for free if you buy it bundled with eReports, Foxy Classes, Web Connection and VisualRep. However, according to me it is not given for free, because if you buy the mere product (not bundled) then you pay farr less.
>>>>
>>>>I'm not saying that the bundles are not worth it, but vfp9 for free? No.
>>>
>>>That's the old practice... "To anyone who sends me $20, I'll send {product name here} for free!".
>>>
>>>In American advertising you'll often find words "free gift"... which makes no sense, it's redundant to the point of imbecility, or suspicion. If you're getting something for free, it's a gift; if it's a gift, it excludes payment by definition. But, since customers like both words, the advertisers just put them together.
>>>
>>>In the above case, maybe "we're throwing this one in for free" sounds better than "if you add this all up and compare prices, this bundle is cheaper by the price of VFP9 than if you bought them all separately"... um, too long, not a sound bite, you already lost the customer's attention. It's supposed that anyone targeted by an advertisement has attention span of about two seconds (rapidly progressing to one), so you just have to make it as short as possible. Logic be damned :).
>>
>>Actually, Dragan, the preferred expression in American advertising is "free with your purchase of ..." I love that one.
>
>The one I love the best is the unsolicited (but can't opt out) "Editor's choice" from one of them book clubs. You get a book delivered, with "Free gift inside" printed in a bunch of places on the box, and an envelope glued to the box with "your invoice is in the envelope" printed on it in small fiendly font.