> The tools work as advertised and are currently priced way cheaper than they cost to create?
Well, that's the grift problem right there - some people use public funds to subsidize a product, undermine the competition, front-run and scalp the hardware market, create inflation for everything, misallocate capital and deprive other assets of investment, all the while attempting a vendor lock-in at somebody else's expense.
Why would anybody see any of these as good is beyond me.
Well, that's the grift problem right there - some people use public funds to subsidize a product, undermine the competition, front-run and scalp the hardware market, create inflation for everything, misallocate capital and deprive other assets of investment, all the while attempting a vendor lock-in at somebody else's expense.
Why would anybody see any of these as good is beyond me.