Message/Argument: Answering the simplest questions by relying on the internet due to the lack of critical thinking has now become reality. People now simply go on their phone’s and type up their desired questions. Then they rely on the internet to answer their desired question. They don’t even know how they received their answer since they typed up their question and received it from the internet most likely without an explanation. This lack of thinking affects their growth mindset in school since all they did at …show more content…
The more you use it the more you lose your social skills like talking someone face to face or talking in a ongoing conversation without using a phone. Also the more you become addicted to technology, the more you lose your physical shape, such as, becoming unhealthy or out of shape. This is due to not paying enough attention to your eating habits and not showing enough attention about your diet. The quotes shows the aspects of logos, since they connect it to the negative impacts of an alcohol or drug to a tech person being constantly nervous to physical conversation or some sort of body …show more content…
A big one: The price of an e-book isn't fixed the way it is with physical books. Ten years ago, a publisher would have sent out its books to the bookstore with the price stamped on the cover. After that, it was done — the publisher couldn't put it on sale to sell more books.
"The exciting thing about digital books is that we actually get to test and price differently," Raccah says. "We can even price on a weekly basis." Once publishers have this tool, the ability to adjust prices in an instant, they can do whatever they want with that tool — like use it to get publicity. That's what Little, Brown did with presidential historian Robert Dallek book on John F. Kennedy, An Unfinished Life.
In the middle of November, Little, Brown dropped the price from $9.99 to $2.99 for 24 hours — the digital equivalent of a one-day-only sale. "That sparks sales; it gets people talking about it," says Terry Adams, a publisher with Little, Brown. "You've just expanded the