← Back to context Comment by LandR 11 hours ago How on earth is the ebook more expensive than the physical copy! 5 comments LandR Reply LtdJorge 7 hours ago And it's not an actual ebook. You have to create an account on the "ebook" provider's site and read it through their website or app. metalliqaz 6 hours ago Worthless. pmarreck 6 hours ago I hate when they do this. I'd rather just buy the physical book, donate it to a library and then obtain the liberated version of the ebook "elsewhere". PaulRobinson 10 hours ago The physical copy will only get used by one reader (at a time). The ebook is going to be, err, "liberated" more often than not around a dorm?In all seriousness, this is likely a nudge to a preference they have for how they want to sell this and how you should want to buy it. LtdJorge 7 hours ago They advertise the ebook as having interactive features and more compared to the print version. Shouldn't it be the preferred one?
LtdJorge 7 hours ago And it's not an actual ebook. You have to create an account on the "ebook" provider's site and read it through their website or app. metalliqaz 6 hours ago Worthless. pmarreck 6 hours ago I hate when they do this. I'd rather just buy the physical book, donate it to a library and then obtain the liberated version of the ebook "elsewhere".
pmarreck 6 hours ago I hate when they do this. I'd rather just buy the physical book, donate it to a library and then obtain the liberated version of the ebook "elsewhere".
PaulRobinson 10 hours ago The physical copy will only get used by one reader (at a time). The ebook is going to be, err, "liberated" more often than not around a dorm?In all seriousness, this is likely a nudge to a preference they have for how they want to sell this and how you should want to buy it. LtdJorge 7 hours ago They advertise the ebook as having interactive features and more compared to the print version. Shouldn't it be the preferred one?
LtdJorge 7 hours ago They advertise the ebook as having interactive features and more compared to the print version. Shouldn't it be the preferred one?
And it's not an actual ebook. You have to create an account on the "ebook" provider's site and read it through their website or app.
Worthless.
I hate when they do this. I'd rather just buy the physical book, donate it to a library and then obtain the liberated version of the ebook "elsewhere".
The physical copy will only get used by one reader (at a time). The ebook is going to be, err, "liberated" more often than not around a dorm?
In all seriousness, this is likely a nudge to a preference they have for how they want to sell this and how you should want to buy it.
They advertise the ebook as having interactive features and more compared to the print version. Shouldn't it be the preferred one?