Originally posted by MarkG
in the technology backwards (compared to US and the most of Europe) Greece, the minister of edcuation announced today that 100% of highschools and 46% of elementary schools have internet access.
so please lets give the "not everyone has net access" argument a rest
dont force me to find the US-homes-with-net-access percentage...
in the technology backwards (compared to US and the most of Europe) Greece, the minister of edcuation announced today that 100% of highschools and 46% of elementary schools have internet access.

so please lets give the "not everyone has net access" argument a rest

dont force me to find the US-homes-with-net-access percentage...


How many play CIV3 at school? Can they burn a CD at school to get the patch to their home computer? (The patches are normally too big for a floppy disk). I have Internet at my job but have to contact the very busy IT support to burn CDs. And they are by corporate policy not allowed to help me with such issues.
As I wrote earlier, this is not a problem for most of us, as we download the patches as soon as they come. But we are fanatics. I believe that a majority of the gamers are not as eager as we. If the game is crappy out of the box, they simply put it away in dissapointment and move on to the next game. My sister did that, and she was even more fanatic about CIV2 than I was.
I still maintain my point: It is arrogant of the software publishers to presume that their customer would be happy to get a semi-finished product... Like if all copies of the first hardback edition of a bestseller novel would have some missing pages that you could download from the publisher's web later.

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