My nearly 21-year-old
daughter is in college, and each semester her professors give her a list of
textbooks that she needs for her courses.
The same thing happened to
me 30 years ago when I was an undergraduate. My professors gave me their lists,
and I went out and purchased the books that were required for the courses.
There is a difference now,
of course. Along with the skyrocketing cost of actually going to college are
the ridiculous costs for textbooks. Each semester, I pay upwards of $1,000-plus
dollars for textbooks for my daughter.
I find this absolutely
outrageous.
Anyway, Amazon's Kindle is
being launched in a larger screen, and some pundits have theorized that they
are trying to grab the college age market by making deals with textbook
publishers so that their books will be available via Kindle.
Read about it here:
http://tech.yahoo.com/news/ap/20090506/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_amazon_kindle_13
I don't have the least bit
of a problem with this if it cuts costs. Sure, the Kindle itself in this
version will cost nearly $500, but if it cuts down the cost of textbooks, then
you will make your money back in no time.
Of course, there are some
who are "ranting and raving" about the evil that Kindle is bringing
upon the world of the college student, but if they were so concerned, then
textbooks wouldn't cost $100-plus dollar apiece on the low end.
What I am saying is that
the textbook publishers made their own bed--and now they are going to have to
account for the excesses.
More power to Kindle if it is able to bring down
the cost of textbooks!
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