James B. Byrne wrote: > On Mon, July 1, 2013 14:03, John R Pierce wrote: >> On 7/1/2013 10:57 AM, Nathan Duehr wrote: >>> DRM'ed server hardware. Pure evil. >> >> why is that evil? why should you pay for features you're not using? >> > > Actually, firmware control of system features has been part of HPQ's > business practice for as long as I can remember. The HP3000 series of > MPE/iX mini computers ran on exactly the same hardware as the HP9000 > HP-UX systems, but were priced considerably higher than their HP9000 > equivalents. However, one could not simply run MPE/iX on the HP9000 > hardware. One had to pay HPQ to come in and run a system utility that > reset a flag on the processor to enable that. On the other hand, one > could run HP-UX on the HP3000 hardware without requiring any changes. <snip> Just so you know, that's not only in the computer industry. Many years ago, I was looking at a repair household appliances yourself book, and saw something I considered astounding. My late wife and I had a cheap washer - it had been the best she could afford before we met - that had no load size control, only one size fits all. After looking at what the book said, I disassembled the control panel on top, we were amazed - there *was* a water level control... but no knob for it. I drilled a hole in the panel, reassembled it, and we used a screwdriver to set the water level to the <click> size. It was, apparently, cheaper for the manufacturer to make all of them the same, but ask about $100 in the eighties to have a panel with the hole drilled and add a knob. mark