The Daily Planet | News from Humber College
Humber basketball team gets a new edition | Print |
Written by Christian Quequish and Keaton Robbins   
Monday, 05 March 2012 14:53

Every once and a while Humber's basketball program is graced with a player whose explosive dunks gain league wide attention. Mark Perrin is the Hawk's newest offensive threat.

Second-year journalist student Keaton Robbins files this report to Daily Planet. Filmed by second-year journalism student Christian Quequish.

 

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Students job opportunity comes in Spring | Print |
Written by Clover Sterling and Royel Edwards   
Tuesday, 13 March 2012 13:50

Manpower Canada reports that there will be a possibility of job increase this Spring.

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Art students showcase work | Print |
Written by Denee Hall and Kayona Lewis   
Tuesday, 20 March 2012 13:35

Second-year art students used Humbers campus as a mock studio on Tuesday to promote their upcoming art show at the Guelph-Humber art gallery.

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Any good "E-Reads" lately? | Print |
Thursday, 03 December 2009 23:15

Could e-readers like Amazon’s Kindle and the Sony eBook Reader one day take the place of paper books?


It seems like the technological route is the way to go for most these days. Newspaper and magazine companies, like The National Post and Playboy, are filing for bankruptcy because they are losing a large chunk of their readership to online viewers. Could the same t
eReader
A woman enjoys reading a conventional book.
hing happen with books?

Amazon’s Kindle was just recently made available to customers in Canada. With its ability to hold up to 1500 books, there is no doubt that this gadget will be a must have for many ‘tekkies’ people this holiday season.

Sony’s eBook Reader, not unlike the Kindle, is small, lightweight, and can carry a few hundred books and PDF files. This product has been available in Canada for quite some time now, and although sales have been steady, it clearly hasn’t made a dent in the book selling industry.

For more on e-readers, watch our video on YouTube.

“I’m against them,” says Brooke Ford, an employee at BMV Books Magazines Videos. “They won’t take off and put books at risk. The physical book is innately human and not everyone has access to the internet. Literacy rates won’t go up because of e-readers. It’s a grotesque format.”

Despite Ford’s opinion, eBook readers are selling. Craig English, an e-reader specialist and employee at Future Shop does acknowledge the sales of e-readers but believes they won’t take over books because books are too wide spread.EREADERS_factbox

“Too many people read books,” says English. “E-readers are more appealing to electronic savvy people. They’ve only been on the market for a couple months and they aren’t exactly a cheap thing. They’re something you have to want.”

As for English’s preference, “I still prefer physical books,” he says.

So what does the future hold for conventional books? It is quite accurate to announce that they are here to stay.

Physical books, whether paper back or hard cover are classic. Written literature is one of the oldest forms on communication and the idea of it making an abrupt exit is unlikely.

E-readers appeal to a certain niche of people, which is why the introduction of electronic gadgets like e-readers catching people’s eyes shouldn’t worry any about the disappearance of paper books. The electronically inclined folks are sure to love the Kindles and eBooks of the world.

By: Matt Ing & Kim Davidson

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Toronto Hydro faces rising electricity demand | Print |
Written by Clover Sterling   
Tuesday, 03 April 2012 10:53

Toronto Hydro is working to meet the huge demand of electricity that will be needed for the booming high rise buildings now under construction in the city’s downtown core,Canada news wire reports.

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