Quoting Larry Colen <[email protected]>:
This would have been handy, I recently picked it up in dead tree
form, and it would be handy to have it on my phone to read at lunch
or whatever.
But, it's cost is far more than a british penny.
Well, you could always try a Virtual Private Network such as
TunnelBear to access geo-restricted sites like this.
Just for fun, I fired up TunnelBear, chose UK as my network location
and tried to see if Google Play UK would let me in. It did.
As I have no need of the book (not having any version of Lightroom), I
stopped at the point where I needed to enter credit card details. But
unless Google checks the country of issue for credit cards, apparently
I could have bought the book for one British penny had I wanted to.
Cheers
Brian
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Brian Walters
Western Sydney Australia
http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/
On Jun 14, 2012, at 1:50 PM, Chris Mitchell wrote:
On 14 June 2012 20:16, Darren Addy <[email protected]> wrote:
On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 1:49 PM, Chris Mitchell
<[email protected]> wrote:
The Martin Evening one. It's available on Google Play for 1 British
penny.
Thanks for the post, Chris.
I wanted to draw your attention to the address field in your browser.
It contains a string of letters, punctuation and numbers beginning
with "http://" that is known as the URL (or internet web address, in
the vernacular).
As such, they are very helpful when used with a procedure known as
"Copy & Paste" for communication via email (etc.) to assist others in
knowing precisely what/where we are talking about.
: )
: )
: )
In any event, I believe the links are referenced here and not the same
good deal for those of us in the U.S.
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/readflat.asp?forum=1041&message=41748091&changemode=1
Let me draw your attention to the Google Play app on Android devices
for it is this that I used - not an old fashioned web browsery thingy.
There is no URL. Just put the words "Martin" and "Evening" into the
friendly space called, in the vernacular, a "Search Field", and Bob's
your uncle..
I did mention British Pennies which might have given a clue that it
might only be available in what is known to colonial areas as
"international", but maybe I should have pointed out clearly that such
an offer may not be available in your jurisdiction. Hard luck.
: ) to you too!
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