This website talks about technology is once again changing the way the school system functions. People are beginning to be able to get their school books online through mobile apps and then use additional apps to create documents. By being able to do this, students will be able to customize their curriculum to how they learn best.
This website is a prime example of how people are beginning to customize every aspect of their life. This website was designed to allow people to customize mobile apps just for their business. So not only are people customizing their personal things, but their businesses too.
This is another website that helps businesses design their own mobile app. The believe that they next big thing for businesses will be to customized their own app for people to purchase. If they do not do this, they may be left behind in the business world.
This article shows that society desire to be able to customize their devices could result in someone's fortune. Pimp your Screen was a recently published app that allows people to select their own skins, screens, and icon shelves for only 99 cents. The article also mentions other mobile apps that are predicted to be Apple's top grossing apps.
A community of writers and scientists are reviewing and discussing scientific ebooks at Download the Universe. eBooks aren't where they are going to be. I'm toying with the idea of producing my own ebook after this next project because I haven't really seen what I think is possible in an ebook but have already storyboarded my own private thoughts in this area. This is a fascinating once in history experience to be part of a major trend as books evolve from paper to ebook. I'm excited! Take a look.
"e-readers have opened up a period of great innovation in how we convey and consume "books," but, as of yet, these new products have not met with the sorts of rigorous and routine reviews that new printed books receive. But a new project, Download the Universe, aims to change that. Led by a set of some of the top science writers in the country -- including Carl Zimmer, Steve Silberman, and Atlantic contributor David Dobbs -- the site aims to provide reviews of new straight-to-ebook science books."