Kindle Discount Pricing – Lower Pricing on Your eReaders
Since the Kindle discount coupon first appeared and then expired, people everywhere have wanted to know how to get their Kindle for a little less money.
The internet is rife with ideas and coupon codes that just don’t seem to be working. Is there a way to get your Kindle for a lower price than you might ordinarily pay?
The answer is yes, there is currently one way to get Kindle readers a little lower priced, and why not? There is nothing positive about paying more than you have to for anything.
It’s not that the E-reader and more isn’t worth the money that you’re going to be paying for it. Far from it. In fact Kindle is one of the most well loved and well respected E-readers out there, and it does so much more than just offer you books on the go.
Think about the ability to carry more than fifty books with you…in fact, more than a hundred. Consider the easy use and all the other things that you can get. The price of a single book is about 20 dollars when you purchase a good hard cover, if not much more. A Kindle book is less than ten dollars and you can carry all of the titles you love, along with newspapers, magazines, and even read blogs. Kindles 3G wireless also offers you the chance to get downloadable books right there from your own private little reading spot. Any time that you want you can add new books. How’s that for convenience? Since Kindle is so well received, you’re going to find more than a quarter of a million books available to you for your Kindle.
And if you want to get your Kindle discount, you simply need to know how to get the lowest price from Amazon.
It’s pretty simple. From time to time Amazon runs special deals and discounts that you can take advantage of. You just need to know how to find them.
The Kindle Blog does just that. It keeps track of the special discounts and deals so you can get your Kindle discount.
I never did get to ordering. Been working on cataloging all day. We got more books in this morning. Yippee! I love looking at the new books.
Yes, I agree with you that the human interest stories are BS, but I suppose the commercials are necessary. (I don't like them, really, but) It cost a load of money to buy the rights to buy the rights to the Olympics, and without all those commercials, NBC would lose money. And I know a lot of sports may be going on at a time, but if there aren't (as in they're only one or two going on at once), it's live coverage, so NBC can't determine when they go on. In real time, you might have five-who knows how [...]
No, not necessarily. It should just be interesting, as in "interest". Generally, a human interest story is something that is unique, unusual or emotionally touching.