Pretty sure majority of sales will be from USA so US$
USD tends to be the most common currency on the Internet, which is why they're only supporting USD.I didnt say that wasnt going to be the case
I said for a UK company to offer a sterling price will have no effect on them. The dollars will get exchanged into sterling anyway.
You could wait until they set up other payment options, however by that time they'll likely be VAT registered so you'll be losing 17.5% on top.Yes, but using paypal to do the conversion you dont get the best rate going. Thats my point.
I can see your point, but the fact Xenforo is a UK based company, I would have thought it wouldnt have been difficult to put up a sterling price. Its going to cost us Brits more because of paypal conversions to purchase a UK product.
Companies such as Vbulletin and IPB manage to have Sterling, Euro and Dollar side by side. The prices remain the same regardless of the exchange rate.
Hate the fact that the only option they have provided is US dollars. I don't disagree with the fact that industry standard is $ and most business would be coming from overseas but one would have hoped that being a british company, sterling pound would be a payment option.
Why people fail to understand small little things is totally beyond me!
Yes, but using paypal to do the conversion you dont get the best rate going. Thats my point.
Wasn't it cheaper to buy vBulletin using the USD currency than it was to pay for the Sterling currency?Companies such as Vbulletin and IPB manage to have Sterling, Euro and Dollar side by side. The prices remain the same regardless of the exchange rate.
PayPal Conversion Rate as of 6 Oct 2010: 1 British Pound = 1.55010 US Dollars
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