Amazon’s tablet serious challenge to Apple’s iPad

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Amazon.com Inc, which revolutionized reading with its Kindle e-reader, is expected to unveil a tablet computer this week that analysts say will seriously challenge Apple’s market dominating iPad. Amazon on Friday invited media to a press conference to be held in New York on Wednesday, declining to provide further details. But analysts were confident that the world’s largest Internet retailer will introduce its long-awaited tablet computer this year to expand in mobile commerce and sell more digital goods and services. “Wednesday is tablet day,” BGC partners analyst Colin Gillis told Reuters. The tablet has been awaited as a strong competitor to Apple Inc’s iPad. Apple has sold about 29 million of the devices since its launch in April 2010. “The real issue here is that, you know, it is likely going to be good for consumers; is this going to be good for shareholders?,” Gillis said. He wondered whether Amazon would price the tablet below those of rivals — and thereby do little to boost margins. “Knowing Amazon, it is likely to be a very aggressive price,” Gillis said. In much the same way Amazon’s Kindle e-reader was priced low to quickly get traction among readers the company is likely to keep the price of its tablet low to attract users and sell other content and services, one analyst said. “It’s a marketing tool to build a relationship with customers and sell them cloud (computing) services,” said James McQuivey, an analyst with Forrester Research.While Amazon has remained tight lipped even about the device’s existence, the TechCrunch blog earlier this month said the Amazon tablet also will be called Kindle.

1 COMMENT

  1. The iPad has a very polished user experience combined with a rich content infrastructure. It's a double whammy that other manufacturers are not delivering.

    Amazon has a chance at matching Apple's content infrastructure. But Amazon will struggle to deliver the great user experience. Their best bet is to branch Android. Nuke all of Google's proprietary software – and replace it with their own Kindle layer on top – delivering books, movies and music through a set of Kindle stores.

    Nuking the Google-y bits of Android will get the nerds all riled up. But as a plan to make money, it might just have some legs.

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