Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Extra Credit Posts

As part of receiving extra credit toward the final exam in the class, you can either see an event around campus, or view a documentary or movie related to the class.  In addition, you can post a class-related topic on this blog that you read, heard or saw online.

In your post, create a linkable URL to the original article (or website), as well as other related links.  Write up a summary of the article (or other media), including the main points you thought most interesting.  Then, provide your own views.  Others can comment on the post for participation credit, or cabncontinue the discussion with other links that provide another viewpoint and, again, summarize, and offer your view (for extra credit).  See below for more details.

Some details about URL choice:
  1. The URLs have to be very recent, preferably in the last few days.  
  2. It has to be technology-related.  So no posts in the news that do not have a technology component.
  3. First one to post about it gets the credit; if another student wants to comment on the same post and add another link (and another point of view), that is fine.   Students can also comment for participation credit.

2 comments:

staubel said...

Since no one else has mentioned Ebooks yet...Also, I wasn't sure how to link the articles in this but I included them in the text.

On Wednesday, the Department of Justice has accused Apple of partnering with five publishers to keep ebook prices artificially high to compete with Amazon.com. The anti-trust charges are likely to lead to a reduction in the price of eBooks, according to the USA Today Article. The allegations are that Apple allowed publishers to sell eBooks for any price thy chose, assuming it was not cheaper than any other price on the internet. So, publishers set prices high to make more profits, which forced Amazon to also set prices high to compete. This lead to artificially high prices of eBooks. Apple plans to take on the Department of Justice in court because they claim that they helped to break “Amazon's own monopolistic grip on ebook sales.” So, Apple claims it was helping to break up Amazon’s monopoly but the Department of Justice claims that in doing so, Apple was breaking the law in a different way. Three publishers have already decided to settle out of court. Reporters estimate that e-Books will return to prices closer to Amazon’s original $9.99 each once the case is settled.

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2012-04-11/apple-ebooks-antitrust-lawsuit/54171390/1

Today, Apple is still fighting the lawsuit that “accuses them of colluding to keep ebook prices high.” According to an eWeek article, Apple is claiming that the allegations are not true. The Justice Department maintains that it is filing suit to protect consumers against companies who try to control the market.

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Desktops-and-Notebooks/Apple-Publishers-Pushing-Back-Against-DOJ-EBook-Charges-526877/

Personally, I own a Kindle. When I first purchased my Kindle I was expecting to be able to purchase eBooks and eSubscriptiosn at prices greatly reduced from physical copies. This was not that case. E-versions were cheaper but most of the time it was still cheaper to buy a used copy of a book then to buy an eBook. Needless to say, I was disappointed. In the days since the allegations have been made public, I have not seen the price of eBooks drop, but I have seen the price of magazine subscriptions drop dramatically. Although I cannot remember the exact price, I estimate the price of Time Magazine was $3.00 an issue last week which has dropped to $0.54 per issue today. Cosmopolitian $0.83 per issue. RollingStone $0.77 per issue. These are the prices I was expecting when I purchased my Kindle.

Dr. Suzie Weisband said...

Good article and comments. I agree that I expected new e-books to be greatly reduced. They have deals you can follow on Twitter, like 8 books for 99 cents for a 24-hour period, but that's not the same thing as just better prices than paperbacks.