Amazon's Digital Day is Like Cyber Monday But For Downloads (cnet.com) 20
Amazon is hoping to replicate the success of its online-only sales. It has announced a "Digital Day" sale on December 30, where it will offer discounts of up to 50 percent on apps, ebooks, games, movies, and music. From a report on CNET: Now, the Seattle-based online retailer giant is hoping to do the same with Digital Day. Movies like "Bolt," "The Lego Movie" and "Storks" are up to 50 percent off. So are games like Titanfall 2 and Rocket League. There will also be deals on Amazon's music streaming service and kids book app Amazon Rapids.
These all sound like walled garden items (Score:2, Informative)
Media that will lock me into using Anazon products.
Pass!!
Re: (Score:2)
i can read my kindle ebooks on every device i own. i used to buy music and it was all vanilla MP3's
what walls?
Re: (Score:2)
Movies DRM'd? Need internet connection to watch?
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, an internet connection is required to stream movies over the internet.
Re: (Score:2)
Amazon music store sells .MP# files
you can play them on just about any digital music player, or burn them to CD from your PC
I read amazon eBooks on my phone, as well as the Kindle
Re: (Score:1)
I hate Trump and Love Obama and I'm not even black or and American.
So frigging what... does it really matter?
Nice advertisement (Score:4)
Re: (Score:1)
Funny thing is, Amazon is trying to make so many of these "shopping days" that they ALL are starting to lose their meaning. I feel like they have had 5+ special sales days in the last 6 months. Where I was once curious if there were good deals, now I just ignore them. Presumably they are trying to emulate "cyber Monday" or "singles day" but they seem to not understand those were "organic" and had some underlying reason to exist. Those days existed for a reason beyond just "buying things on a specific day
I hear there is another sale (Score:1)
"Sale" is a misnomer (Score:2)
All of these items are inflected with DRM which makes "sale" entirely inaccurate. You are basically licensing the content until the content provider sees fit to stop doing so, something they can do at any time, for any reason. Don't buy into this nonsense. Insist on only DRM-free ebooks, movies, music, and apps!