uch of lighting is now a commodity. Consider. When prices for a class of goods drop significantly... more uch of lighting is now a commodity. Consider. When prices for a class of goods drop significantly and are constrained within in a narrow range, the goods become a commodity. Commodity products are seemingly indistinguishable and the range of quality—if perceptible at all—is very narrow. Commodity products are interchangeable: one can be replaced with another. Commodity products lack intangible value: their worth has been objectified and is expressed almost exclusively by their cost. Surely this describes lighting. M
uch of lighting is now a commodity. Consider. When prices for a class of goods drop significantly... more uch of lighting is now a commodity. Consider. When prices for a class of goods drop significantly and are constrained within in a narrow range, the goods become a commodity. Commodity products are seemingly indistinguishable and the range of quality—if perceptible at all—is very narrow. Commodity products are interchangeable: one can be replaced with another. Commodity products lack intangible value: their worth has been objectified and is expressed almost exclusively by their cost. Surely this describes lighting. M
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