Post by eglobal » Thu Jun 26, 2008 8:54 am

has anyone integrated opencart with paypal website payments pro? I'd love some insight as I am trying to figure it out myself.

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Post by mayflyjac » Tue Dec 02, 2008 12:00 am

Ditto. I'm trying to integrate a pro account also, but am stuck at what I am supposed to do.

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Post by hm2k » Tue Dec 02, 2008 12:23 am

I had someone else request this too, it shouldn't be too hard to code, I've just got other things to deal with atm.

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Post by bruce » Tue Dec 02, 2008 9:33 am

Shameless plug...

Check out the commercial section for all the payment extensions I have for sale.

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Post by Qphoria » Tue Dec 02, 2008 9:50 am

:) You've been a busy little bugger!
There's separate UK and US APIs for paypal pro?

I do have a question about pricing... this is not necessarily related to your pricing directly, but I wondered....

Windows XP cost $200 when it came out.
Pirates too cheap to pay $200 just "acquired it" elsewhere
But I wonder, if it was more affordable from the start, would it not have been more profitable overall?
Sometimes when something is so cheap it's not worth it to pirate and more are willing to pay the lower price, especially if you "fool" them into thinking its a good deal like "Special! WinXP Originally priced at $199, but this weekend only, get it for $49.99!!!" People would run right out.

$200 x 100,000 customers = $20,000,000
or
$50 x 1,000,000 customers = $50,000,000

Not that microsoft is hurting in the finance department... but when it comes to something intangible and unlimited as software, I would think that cheaper would bring more business... but it's totally unresearched and uneducated thoughts in my head
Last edited by Qphoria on Tue Dec 02, 2008 9:53 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Post by david.gilbert » Tue Dec 02, 2008 10:57 am

Qphoria wrote: Windows XP cost $200 when it came out.
Pirates too cheap to pay $200 just "acquired it" elsewhere
But I wonder, if it was more affordable from the start, would it not have been more profitable overall?
Sometimes when something is so cheap it's not worth it to pirate and more are willing to pay the lower price, especially if you "fool" them into thinking its a good deal like "Special! WinXP Originally priced at $199, but this weekend only, get it for $49.99!!!" People would run right out.
Why buy legit copies of windows when the GUI and the mouse belong to apple?? yeah thats right BILL I know what you did that summer!

Besides, Linux is free and a great alternative!

I suggest for all those interested in how Microsoft stole the GUI and mouse, the watch Pirates of Sillicone Valley. Info Here: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0168122/
Last edited by david.gilbert on Tue Dec 02, 2008 10:59 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Post by Qphoria » Tue Dec 02, 2008 11:12 am

lol that's another discussion altogether :)

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Post by bruce » Tue Dec 02, 2008 3:20 pm

Hi Q,

The target market is people in business who want real support and a tested product. All of my customers have paid me promptly, even though I do not ask for payment until the product is completely installed and system tested. Neither has anyone complained about the deal they received from me. On the contrary, I have had offers of accomodation in several different countries from grateful, paying customers as well as offers of additional work.

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Post by jty » Tue Dec 02, 2008 3:40 pm

Qphoria wrote: But I wonder, if it was more affordable from the start, would it not have been more profitable overall?
Sometimes when something is so cheap it's not worth it to pirate and more are willing to pay the lower price,
If it was a thing that didn't require support, I would tend to agree but with software, support is important. The time spent on support may not make it worthwhile going cheap to get volume.

The other thing to consider is that cheap prices attract cheap clients who are a pain to deal with. Generally speaking, those who are prepared to pay are better people to deal with.

And when it comes to computers, real business people are willing to pay because it is cheaper for them to pay someone than to try and do it for free/cheap. Ironically, the Free/Cheap option can be more expensive.
bruce wrote: On the contrary, I have had offers of accomodation in several different countries from grateful, paying customers as well as offers of additional work.
So Bruce has been in the Bahamas writing payment modules  :D

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