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parsadotsh | 4 years ago

It does make sense. Consider the phrase "twice as cheap"

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sascha_sl|4 years ago

It should be percentage points, because "100% cheaper" would already be free.

It probably means AWS is 440% more expensive.

Rastonbury|4 years ago

Technically yes but no person is reading that and thinking backblaze is paying you or its free. Its a nitpick

mulmen|4 years ago

I have always found that phrasing to be confusing. Consider the reciprocal, “half as cheap”. Should that be interpreted as… double?

Say “half the cost” or “cheaper by half”.

Dylan16807|4 years ago

> Consider the reciprocal, “half as cheap”. Should that be interpreted as… double?

If the phrasing makes it clear they're talking about a higher price, then yes that's a good interpretation. You get half as good a deal.

Someone might say "half as cheap" to talk about a price drop by 50%, even though that's not really correct, but such is language.

boffinism|4 years ago

What is 440% less than 1, then? In my book, it's -3.4.

wlesieutre|4 years ago

I've considered it, and decided that "twice as cheap" is equally poor choice of words

Blahah|4 years ago

It doesn't make sense. Consider the phrase "once as cheap". Multiply by two. That's twice as cheap. Meaningless.

Dylan16807|4 years ago

Do you think "twice as expensive" is meaningless? Because by that same logic, if I start with "once as expensive" that's not a number and multiplying by two gives me a meaningless concept.