NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,074
Thanks for the information about the Nook! I will check that out - I'm pretty sure that the Nook (or something similar) will more than pay for itself over the duration of the degree, with the money we'll save by not buying printed textbooks.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but unless you're raising an English, Business, or History major that strategy is unlikely to work out. I buy academic electronic titles for the research institute that I work for, and the reality is that they are much MORE expensive than the printed versions, and because they have DRM restrictions, they cannot be re-sold.
The price issue is because the hard copies are sold at wholesale to retail book jobbers who are allowed to sell them at whatever price the market will bear. The electronic versions are not wholesaled. The publishers only sell them directly to the end user, and that means that you will always pay list price for them. I buy biology and biochemistry, and my average price per title is approx. $185.
There is a world of difference between trade and academic titles in terms of pricing and marketing. In English and History and Business there is some crossover, but not in most of the sciences and social sciences. Also, be aware that in the sciences color illustrations are often crucial; if your device can't display color then you cannot properly read the graphs.