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Prices often change within small margins and are always accepted. Unless part A suddenly went from say, £10,000 to £20,000, then it would generally be accepted.
Even prices on longstanding contracts (parts needed to build parts on an ongoing basis), they go up marginally with inflation, cost...
I have some bose speakers for my old laptop, now sold it so there just sitting in the cupboard.
They were £100, and tbh in terms of quality, met the standard of my mates speakers that were another brand and £60.
It's because of inflation, so going by their word, this increase is to simply cover that.
My comment was referring to the fact that they won't 'have paid off all their operating hardware'. I've worked in finance in a huge company pal (Roll's Royce, where we regularly had £60m projects being...
Yes, but there prices over all their contracts will be supporting it. Did you think they spent the millions they did on the 4G network through projected figures of the 4G contracts? It has to come from everywhere.
So if you just kept this contract rolling, for say 10 years and just bought handsets and kept the deal going, how would they increase the price to reflect inflation?
This is the TV I'm looking at ordering soon.
http://www.currys.co.uk/gbuk/samsung-ue55es8000-full-hd-55-led-3d-tv-12371896-pdt.html - Looks EPIC in real life, such amazing picture quality, really sold me over the 55" LG I was looking at which was a bit cheaper.
Not sure what to do with...