(04-06-2014, 02:18 PM)BAndrew Wrote: Quote:the problem is that the free marketplace, which is supposed to function so that good ideas are rewarded with patronage and bad ones ignored, has turned into a machine that arbitrates its ideas so as to perfectly coincide with demand, in other words they are artificially made to appeal to as many people as possible.
Why can't I see where the problem is? Good ideas are more likely to be rewarded than bad ones (FG is an example of this) and I find it very logical for companies to want to appeal to as many people as possible. If they succeed then there is probably a good reason for it. Also, they don't force people to buy their stuff, they convince them.
Might I ask that you read my post again? In it are counterpoints to all of your comments.
The work itself should be the ultimate reward - the money is only upkeep, an unfortunate prerequisite for future projects, and perhaps an opportunity for expansion. This has been reversed in the corporate world so that the objective is money, and the work of "art" is the means.