Reading between the lines a bit, it seems as though publishers now consider libraries to be the competition and have fired the opening shot in
a kind of price war.
Not exact matches
If there's a
price war in packaged goods, Kimberly - Clark Corp. won,
kind of, last quarter.
Another GW Bush
kind of guy leading us for some «God told» crusade to launch some «preemptive»
wars, this time against maybe Iran, or China???? The
price tag?
Clearly Stanton wanted John Carter to be a fantasy epic along the lines
of Star
Wars and Avatar, but the fits and starts
of humor smack
of reshoots and cold - footed studio execs frightened by the astronomical
price tag and thinking, «Well, everyone likes Pirates
of the Caribbean and those are
kind of funny.»
For instance in France there is a law saying that book
prices have to be decided by the publisher and not the seller, so that
kind of war between publisher and seller can't happen.
Ultimately an HP Pavillion DM1Z for $ 450 is probably the heaviest competition for iPad or any tablet but if you are going to have a tablet that you want to use for any
kind of productivity then this and the rest
of the Honeycomb devices are going to take over once the apps start flowing and the
price wars begin.
The game has dropped in
price for other systems and has already had a successor announced — the news Star
Wars branded 3.0 - before this version had hit the stores, which
kind of negates the impact for this title further.
The games industry is awash with changes to
pricing and distribution models, and neither God
of War or Detroit have any
kind of micro-transactions or anything you could accuse
of being unsavoury or hidden.