Xmas said:
The amount of effort you put into something or the price of its parts hardly affects what it's worth for the customer.
I don't think such a general statement is accurate. While it is true that
sometimes the amount of effort or price of components going into a piece of hardware doesn't affect it's perceived value to the customer, that is by no means
always the case.
For a simple example, think of a high-end audio amplifier. If someone takes the time and effort to hand match resistors, capacitors, etc., then that is value added effort, and as such it increases what the hardware is worth to the customer. Also, you can use more expensive metal film resistors etc. that will increase what the hardware is worth to the customer.
On the other hand, you could conceivably spend a great deal of time and effort hand picking resistors and such that were
horribly matched, and you could I suppose use really expensive components that were
perfectly unsuited for the application. In that case, then the effort and component price would not affect the value to the customer.
Perhaps your point was simply that the final performance (be it speed, image quality, or sound quality) is not there, it doesn't matter how much unobtainium was put in there, or how many years it took to design that crap. That is certainly a valid point, but not all things are so complex that that can even occur. In some things, more expensive components inevitably result in a more valuable finished product.
Maybe Gfx cards are on the other end of the spectrum though. ? In any case, I certainly feel when I a few hundred on a new video card that I'm actually getting more per dollar than when I buy a new CPU for $100. Just my opinion though.