Amazon has issued a strong challenge to Google/Asus’ impressive Nexus 7 tablet and the eternally popular Apple iPad, adding a bigger power powerful tablet called the Kindle Fire HD.
In what amounted to Amazon’s biggest and most strategic connected-device announcement in its 18-year history, the online retailer and Web services provider 6 September unveiled and demonstrated three new versions of its popular Kindle tablet PC.
To challenge the likes of Apple and Google, Amazon has debuted:
Each of the three devices is available for order starting today (6 September) from the Amazon Website. The Kindle Fire HD will begin shipping 20 November. The 7-inch Kindle Fire and the Paperwhite e-reader will ship 14 September.
UK prices have been revealed as £159 for the top-end Kindle Fire HD, £129 for the 7-inch Kindle Fire and £69 for new Kindle e-reader.
Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, who made all the announcements at a media event in Los Angeles, claimed that a Kindle Fire HD and a one-year data plan will cost about half of what a comparable Apple iPad and its own plan will cost.
“An iPad 3 costs $729 for the device. A 12-month data plan, with 250MB worth of downloads per month, 20GB of cloud storage and a $10 (£6) App Store credit, will cost $230 (£144), for a total of $959 (£602). Our Kindle Fire HD costs $499 (£313) for the device, and the comparable service package is $50 (£31) per year, for a total of $549 (£344),” Bezos said.
Regarding the 7-inch Kindle Fire, “Amazon is clearly spooked by Google’s Nexus 7 coming in at $200 (£125) for a much more capable device, and it’s upped its own hardware specs while reducing the price to $159 (£100), which is clearly an attempt to keep it somewhat attractive in the face of that new competition from Google and Asus,” Jan Dawson, chief telecom analyst at Ovum, remarked in a media advisory following the launch event.
About the Paperwhite, Dawson wrote that “the new pure e-readers reaffirm Amazon as the clear leader in this space. The $69 (£43) price point for the basic Kindle is unbeatable, and the Paperwhite devices are now the best-in-class for backlit e-readers. There’s no-one else that does these things this well, this cheaply.”
The Kindle Paperwhite comes with a lighted display with what Amazon describes as “much better contrast” than previous Kindles. The display is lit by a bulb located on the top that shines down the display.
Amazon is claiming that the device – thanks to power-efficient processors supplied by Intel – will have eight weeks of battery life, even when the light is turned on. The reader still has its sharp display with no glare from a glossy screen, Bezos said.
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