By now I’m sure you may have heard about the Kindle, Amazon.com’s wireless reading device that lets you download a whole book in a minute and now can carry over 1,500 books in one device (on the Kindle 2). Supposedly, the screen “reads like real paper” (check out the video below). You can also get magazines and newspapers, and subscribe to blogs on the Kindle.
[youtube ETae0FBlCuE]Today, I heard about the nook from the US store, Barnes & Noble. The nook boasts a similar screen display as the Kindle (ie. it “reads like real paper”), plus you can change the font size, and you can store up to 1,500 books digitally, just like the Kindle 2. You can also make notes and highlight right on the page itself.
[youtube er78E7x317w]All of this is really cool technology – I really like that you can carry hundreds of titles around with either device (it would definitely save your shoulders from carry around a ridiculously heavy backpack). However, I still like to hold the real book in my hand while re-reading Harry Potter & the Deathly Hallows, despite its weight.
A lot of debate has come up over the last couple years about the death of print media, and the fact that the Kindle and nook are rising in popularity really reinforces this idea.
What do you think – would you rather have in your hand a real paperback to read, or is the new technology available too intriguing and fun? Do you think that people will stop buying real books because of these technological advances? Share your thoughts below in the comment section, or Facebook or tweet at us to let us know your opinion.


“Sigh”… I was really expecting something different when I decided to read this novel. You see, from what I had heard, it is a story that takes place in a world that has suffered a zombie apocalypse. Groups of people built towns surrounded by fences to protect themselves from the zombies, and now, many generations later, a girl must leave the fence because her town was overrun by zombies.


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Pets provide us not only with a life-long friend, they also serve as important members of our community! Dogs have been trained to help the blind and impaired, as sniffers for harmful substances, and as hospital visitors. It is proven that no matter what illness, a visit from an animal can be very therapeutic for hospital patients. People have even had pets since the ancient Egyptian times. The Egyptians must have been pretty smart, because already at their early stage in civilization, they were worshipping their cats as gods.
Are you a game developer or interested in becoming one? Or do you just have some time to kill? Whatever the reason, I have something you might be interested in. 
Raging crowds, raving teens, and disapproving parents, what do all three of these things have in common? You guessed it!