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> is sold out of its own store Lose-lose because you have to do a TINY bit more work to find product, while taking advantage of potentially better pricing and knowing more of the profit is going to creators instead of middlemen? I love the fact that I have access to Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, and HBO Max and can cancel/renew individual services pretty much without friction or anything more than a month-to-month contract. It's not any more work to install an app, than it used to be to call your cable companies customer service to change services. Similarly, I have Steam, EA Desktop, GOG, Epic Games, and a few other game clients installed. Many games can be found across all of them, while others are exclusive. In these cases, it isn't any more effort to remember which app I need to use as it was what channel I need to swap to when watching TV. I just don't see where customers are losing out, when it's the best we've ever had it. |
My priority is my time and effort. To say its a tiny bit more work handwaves any argument behind your individual value-metric. To you it's a tiny bit more work, to me it is an amount of friction I'm usually not interested in dealing with. I don't want to maintain an account with every service provider. I don't want to provide my email address and credit card number to anybody who asks. Much less, I don't want to have to search and find what market I can purchase content on.
> I love the fact that I have access to Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, and HBO Max and can cancel/renew individual services pretty much without friction or anything more than a month-to-month contract. It's not any more work to install an app, than it used to be to call your cable companies customer service to change services.
It is matter-of-factly more work than having content centralized, which was the origin of the parent comment and my statement. Multiple app stores are the decentralization of content, by definition.
> Similarly, I have Steam, EA Desktop, GOG, Epic Games, and a few other game clients installed. Many games can be found across all of them, while others are exclusive. In these cases, it isn't any more effort to remember which app I need to use as it was what channel I need to swap to when watching TV.
You're welcome to decide that this is fine for you. My point is that it is not fine for me. More garbage to configure to get the same end result is, to me (a consumer), a net negative.
edit I'll also add that your entire comment totally ignores those that aren't very tech literate. I love that my mom has a single app store to use, and doesn't have to juggle multiple different providers to maintain the things she uses.