Ironworks Gaming Forum

Ironworks Gaming Forum (http://www.ironworksforum.com/forum/index.php)
-   General Conversation Archives (11/2000 - 01/2005) (http://www.ironworksforum.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=28)
-   -   Saving money on text books (http://www.ironworksforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=89429)

Larry_OHF 02-26-2004 02:54 PM

<font color=skyblue>Yo...I wish that I had known about this before. Instead of buying my stupid college books for $50 "used" in the bookstore, I can go to half.com and type in the ISBN number and get them for even less! I'll know to do it next semester.

Does anyone else shop like that?</font>

harleyquinn 02-26-2004 03:00 PM

I shop like that for just about anything. Games, books, clothes.
I've been doing it for my computer parts, so far it's saved me about $200 of what it would be for buying from the store, and many of the things I got are new, just from people who only sell on ebay, so it saves me a lot.

Arledrian 02-26-2004 03:07 PM

I buy everything online, from clothes, to college textbooks, to electronics, to games. I've been able to afford things I never imagined by going to ebay, amazon, and half.com.

[ 02-26-2004, 03:08 PM: Message edited by: Arledrian ]

Illumina Drathiran'ar 02-26-2004 06:10 PM

Aye, I ordered my math textbook from half.com... I saved about sixty bucks.

From now on, that's where I'm getting all of my textbooks.

Larry_OHF 02-28-2004 02:13 PM

<font color=skyblue> Are there any other places besides ebay and half.com that specialize in products that I would have an interest in (Nationally), or does anyone have any shopping tips to share?</font>

spydar 02-28-2004 02:23 PM

I've never heard of this half.com place, I'll have to check that out next semester. as it was I bought/sold most of my textbooks at my university's online classifieds. made over $200 selling old ones, and only spent $110 on new ones.

[ 02-28-2004, 02:24 PM: Message edited by: spydar ]

Illumina Drathiran'ar 02-28-2004 02:58 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Larry_OHF:
<font color=skyblue> Are there any other places besides ebay and half.com that specialize in products that I would have an interest in (Nationally), or does anyone have any shopping tips to share?</font>
Get a job in the bookstore itself, befriend someone there, or, best yet, have the luck to be friends with several people who happen to work there. You get dibs on what used books might come in, old editions that might get thrown away but are still useable.. The works.

Olorin 02-28-2004 11:10 PM

You can also look for things at sites out of country. I got a great deal once for a book from amazon.ca (Canadian--I'm in US). It was partly because the book was published in Canada, and partly because the exchange rate was very favorable at the time.

What I usually do is look up the book through my school, or on the net to get the ISBN. Then I do a google search on the ISBN to find places that sell the book. It works pretty well.

WillowIX 03-01-2004 09:45 AM

For medicine or biology students you can get some books for free on the net. Look at the book shelf here. They expand their "library" quite often too. [img]smile.gif[/img]

harleyquinn 03-01-2004 10:27 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by spydar:
I've never heard of this half.com place, I'll have to check that out next semester. as it was I bought/sold most of my textbooks at my university's online classifieds. made over $200 selling old ones, and only spent $110 on new ones.
It's owned by ebay, the only difference is you can list your things indefinitely, people don't bid, you just set the price you want to sell it for and it sits there until someone buys it. Then you can do feedback just like on ebay I believe.
I found it to be more of a pain to list things on there then on ebay especially if what you want to sell doesn't fit into any of their predefined catagories.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:20 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©2024 Ironworks Gaming & ©2024 The Great Escape Studios TM - All Rights Reserved