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paul8210 wrote:If two games were played each night instead of three and you still spent 10 minutes a night "engaging" with the game, then, the argument that the game would be a 50% improvement in value because the season would be 80 days long instead of 54 days long doesn't hold water for me.
So equating value with time spent is a shaky proposition.
Paul makes a good point here. And it is what Jason was stating as well although in a much longer form. That is, whether you spend 10 min or 30 min, or whether strat gives you a season length of 54 days or 80 days, the service is exactly the same. You still pay 20 dollars for a 162 game season, get all the stats, have the abilities to choose your line ups and pitchers, make trades, drop players etc.
They both negate time engaging with the service as a factor in its value. This may be true, but it isn't what I argued at the beginning of this post. I argued that spending 20 dollars for a service that takes me (and by extension everyone) 10 min. a night is expensive, or to put it in terms Jason mentioned, not a good value.
Jason changed the argument from using time spent as a determining factor in value, to arguing the services provided are a good value in themselves whether time spent on them is used or not. He negated my argument by saying that time spent is a personal thing not an objective thing, and therefore has no merit in judging value.
But again that was not the argument I was making.
If you want to argue it then you must argue how spending 10min on a service per night is worth 20.00 over the 54 days a season lasts. Not whether the service in itself is a good value for 20.00.
Argue it is a good service when spending 10 min a day on it for 20.00 for 54 days. Then when you make a good argument I can change my point of view. I can say yeah, he is right, it is a good value for 10min a night for 54 days for 20.00.
Arguing that the service is a good value for 20.00 because of what it gives you is pointless if the 10min a night isn't involved in the argument.
If a game of basketball costs 20.00 and provides the service of watching players, run, shoot, steal, dribble, pass etc. Is it of the same value whether you spend 10 min watching or 2 hrs watching? Of course not.
If it takes me 10 minutes to check my team, make line up and pitching adjustments and check box scores etc., and Im not any different in my abilities to click a mouse and look at a screen, and study statistics than anyone else, then it isn't my personal choice to limit the amount of time engaging with the service, it's just the time it takes to engage with the service. And 10 minutes a night is too short for 20.00 for 54 days.
It means if I return to the basketball analogy, that the games are 10 minutes long and you don't have a choice for longer unless you repeat watching the same game or spending another 20.00 to watch another game.
If you disagree and think that 10 min a night is a good value for 20.00 for 54 days, then argue that point, don't change the whole argument to negate time spent when time spent is a crucial element in judging the value of the services provided.
I guess perhaps I equate value with time spent using something where others don't. Or perhaps they do but don't realize it or choose to ignore it.
Scott.