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AHA!
So, the Orangutang with a black ski-mask and a beer in his hand chasing after two blondes that I saw on the WWW last week was you 3o3? I should have known! Cool! |
That's me alright; althou i don't chase any blondes. I've already got the best blonde.
althou, she is pissed at me now But that is an different matter; what i was chasing was acctually more. Hmm. beer - i need more of that EDIT: And now everything is fine. ah. I love my honeybunny |
OK, you were chasing after the BEERS that those two blondes were holding!
Perfectly logical explanation, any sane man, err Orangutang, would have done the same thing...your girlfriend is over reacting! My pretty little blonde got mad at me when I bought my Virus! :twisted: Ooops! |
That's right - don't stand in the way between my beer and my other beer. damn it.
Argh, i am getting drunk here |
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Once the engineers say "yeah, looks like we'll make it," committments to distributors get made and advertising goes out. Managemnet has to do that because those things take time to put in motion. The odd thing is, of course, that every project takes longer than you want and (usually) less than you fear. That being the case, engineering management would be well served to be pessimistic in their timelines, but they're also trying to scoop competition and dodge creditors. You could call it a lose/lose scenario. |
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Onllyy joking..... DS |
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However, I also agree with his later statement of: Quote:
This caused their existing clients to stop ordering new licenses as they feared an imminent upgrade/conversion and scared their prospective clients into waiting to give them any money because they did not want to be on the "Bleeding Edge" of a new and untested technology. For Access it is a little different in that a Virus C is still a bad-ass synth and some people might not be shy in buying it even I they know the TI is coming out. It is still bad business, but in al honestly it is a difficult game to win. No company will ever have their product designed, tested, manufactured and on a perfectly predictable delivery schedule; no matter what business they are in. In general though it is better practice to UNDER PROMISE and OVER DELIVER. I also agree with 3o3: Quote:
![]() ...and apparently apes as well! -AlexHall74 |
you know i love monkeys but lets get back to the real topic.
any news on the new korg product? |
I'm posting on a different forum to see if there is any other info there...
I'll be back! |
My wife runs her P.R. firm, maybe ACCESS should hire her! :D She'll get the job done right and get some mp3's and tentative release dates out of them. On the business and PR side though (in all seriousness), they are doing a SHITTY job!!!
I mean seriously though, 2 months go by since announcement and not 1 mp3 of any type or tentative release dates. I think they are forgetting that the orders they have now are PREorders. The customer can change their mind if something better comes along. BUUUUUTTTTT, nothing probably will, soo we wont. :roll: |
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