jitgoel wrote:
conty911 wrote:
D?
The early buyers of a novel product are always people who are quick to acquire novelties, but also often as quick to tire of them.
The early buyers may be a few of the lot and the premise talks about only the early buyers, rest of the folks can still purchase and rent out videos.
Not very clear on your explaination. Can you please elaborate.
Conclusion:
once the market for video recorders is saturated, businesses distributing videos face hard times.Premise 1) Six months or so after getting a video recorder,
many early buyers apparently
lost interest in obtaining videos to watch on it.
premise 2.)The trade of businesses
selling and renting videos is still buoyant, because
the number of homes with video recorders is still growing.
Carefully observe the bolded parts.
Premise 1 talks about only early buyers losing interest and not the whole population of buyers.
premise 2 talks about that thetrade is good as the number of people (not the early buyers but others as-well) who purchase video players is growing.
Now you can easily, find the option which attacks the conclusion.
option D:The early buyers of a novel product are always people who are quick to acquire novelties, but also often as quick to tire of them.
If early buyers have a habbit of buying and retiring their purchase quickly , then it will not effect the other people as stated in premise 2 "the number of homes with video recorders is still growing".
Option D segregates early buyers from rest of the buyers and hence weakens the conclusion that all people will lose interest in buying videos after saturation.
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