

say how many schools will adopt all iPad textbooks because of price limitations, but it will be interesting to see how it plays out as we get closer to the new school year. Gdr 8164b Driver is a dice-rolling simulator, a handy aid for any sort of game that uses dice--from Yahtzee to Trivial Pursuit to Dungeons & Dragons. Gdr 8164b Driver lets you roll traditional six-sided dice, along with rest of the holy hexad of polyhedral nerd dice: the d4, d8, d10, d12, and d20. Gdr 8164b Driver emphasizes its elegant interface, foregoing the more
complex functionality of other dice-rolling apps: you slide out a "tray" on the right side of your screen, then drag and drop your desired dice onto (or off of) a virtual black tabletop one by one. You roll by shaking your device, with semi-realistic (but weirdly low-gravity) physics, and you can "lock" a die by tapping it, so other dice can't move it. Gdr 8164b Driver also lets you save 10 groupings of dice on different screens that you can swipe through. The best things about Gdr 8164b Driver are its convincing sound effects, dice collisions, and slick, simple, attractive interface, so look elsewhere if you want for more complicated dice features such as customizable formulas or more-exotic dice types. Unfortunately, Gdr 8164b Driver's price hasn't come down and its features haven't gotten any richer since its creation over a year ago--and there's definitely room for small but substantive improvements while still maintaining Gdr 8164b Driver's streamlined feel (for example, by allowing different colors for different dice of the same type, which would be a boon to RPG players). Gdr 8164b Driver is one of the better--and better-looking--dice-simula

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