Staples Needs a Calculator for Savings

I snapped this humorous pricing issue at Staples. Not often that the store undersells the savings on something! The savings is either really 31.45 or the purchased seperately price is incorrect.
I am posting this guiltily since I lamented the overposting of camera phone pricing errors on consumerist of late, but I found this one humorous. A feeling I am sure all the other posters had regarding theirs.
Amazon Reveals Kindle Ebook Prices

(Kindle default font)
Newsweek has a long and informational interview with Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com. In the interview Bezos reveals new information about pricing, confirms features and explains the benefits of digital to authors.
Pricing: The Great News
“Amazon prices Kindle editions of New York Times best sellers and new releases in hardback at $9.99. The first chapter of almost any book is available as a free sample.”
New releases for $10 and older books for $2, brilliant.
The overarching goal of Amazon and Kindle seems to be set to deliver a large back catalog of books in the near future at affordable prices.
Features:
Nothing really new from the leaked specs but the confirmation of EVDO from Sprint is confirmed as is a battery life of 30 hours. I hope that the EVDO service doesn’t require a contract and huge monthly fee from Sprint to use.
Benefits to Writers:
For argument’s sake, let’s say cutting the price in half will double a book’s sales—given that the royalty check would be the same, wouldn’t an author prefer twice the number of readers? When I posed the question to best-selling novelist James Patterson, who was given an early look at the Kindle, he said that if the royalty fee were the same, he’d take the readers. (He’s also a believer that the Kindle will succeed: “The baby boomers have a love affair with paper,” he says. “But the next-gen people, in their 20s and below, do everything on a screen.”)
Overall I still think $400 for the Kindle is too much. I hope that Amazon will allow users to purchase these books for Windows Mobile devices and the iPhone.
Reinventing the Book – Newsweek
Fourth Quarter: How Much Will Gaming Cost You
Kotaku rounded up the “must have” games for the rest of the year and slapped a cold hard price on our gaming addiction.
The pricing breakdown by console :
Playstation 3 – $974.88
Wii – $239.95
Xbox 360 – $704.90
These lists comprise a broad group of games but it is apparent that this will be a costly holiday for many a gamer.
My holiday rundown includes many on the list and a few others.
Wii
Hopefully this year:
Super Mario Galaxy: $49.99
Super Smash Bros. Brawl: $49.99
Mercury Revolution: $29.99
Would like to have:
Mario and Sonic: $49.99
Xbox 360
Hopefully this year:
Call of Duty 4: $59.99
Skate: $59.99
Assassin’s Creed: $59.99
Rock Band Bundle: $169.99
And a few more
I think I will have to make some tough decisions to keep in budget!


Josh Smith is a blogger, database manager and adjunct professor of business and technology. 





