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Kindle Fire: Android Tablet Makers May Lower Prices In Wake Of Amazon's $199 Device

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First Posted: 09/29/11 06:27 PM ET Updated: 11/29/11 05:12 AM ET


By Miyoung Kim

SEOUL (Reuters) - Asian technology companies came under pressure on Thursday to slash prices of their tablet computers after Amazon.com launched its Kindle Fire at a mass market-friendly $199.

From Samsung Electronics to Sony Corp, major Asian tablet makers have ambitious plans to take on Apple, whose iPad is the gold standard in the booming market.

With their me-too type of products priced almost at the same level as the iPad's starting price of $499, none of them have however been able to gain any significant market share from Apple.

So far, Samsung has been seen as the most credible challenger to the iPad and some analysts suggest it could lose its No. 2 position to the eagerly anticipated Fire.

The South Korean company's tablet marketing campaign has also stumbled in recent months due to Apple's legal attempts to ban Samsung's tablet sales in Australia, the United States and Germany, over patent infringement, among other claims.

The Kindle Fire, while lacking many of the high-tech bells and whistles common on tablets from cameras to 3G wireless connection, may sound the death knell for a raft of devices based on Google Inc's Android operating system.

"The pricing is critical to gain traction in the tablet market... Rival manufacturers have failed to attract consumers as they have matched the iPad's price point without matching its content offering," said Adam Leach, an analyst at research firm Ovum.

"Amazon's retail-based business model allows the company to subsidize the device on the premise that consumers will buy more from Amazon, be that physical goods or its digital content."

Samsung's Galaxy Tab, Sony's S tablet, Motorola's Zoom and many others from Acer Inc and Asustek Computer Inc all run on Android, which Amazon's Fire also uses and combines with its online store.

By pricing the Fire at less than half the iPad -- yet stripping out costlier components and features -- the Internet retailer hopes to get the device into millions of consumers' hands and then into Amazon books, movies, music and other content.

TOUGH FOR SAMSUNG

Samsung's new tablet Galaxy 10.1 is priced roughly the same as the iPad. Even at that price, a slim profit margin of around 5 percent makes it difficult for Samsung to cut prices sharply, analysts say.

Worldwide tablet shipments will more than triple to 60 million units this year and surge to 275.3 million units by 2015, research firm IHS iSuppli forecasts.

Apple dominates the North American tablet market, with 80 percent of the 7.5 million units shipped during the second quarter of 2011, Strategy Analytics says.

Analysts had expected Amazon's tablet to be priced around $250, roughly half the price of Apple's iPad, which starts at $499.

Sony vowed in January to become the world's No. 2 tablet maker -- behind Apple -- by 2012 and Sony executives have since stuck to that ambitious claim.

"We expect the Amazon tablet to... put pressure on the other non-iPad competitors as they are unlikely to be able to compete on price and value," UBS analysts said in a note.

"At the $199, we believe Amazon's tablet has the potential to be disruptive to the market and, in particular, the non-iPad market...Other tablet vendors will find it difficult to match Amazon's price point."

HP's firesale of its TouchPad tablet at $99 just six weeks after its launch created strong demand for its soon-to-be-killed product, a sign of just how critical prices are in the sector.

(Editing by Anshuman Daga)
Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions


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By Miyoung Kim SEOUL (Reuters) - Asian technology companies came under pressure on Thursday to slash prices of their tablet computers after Amazon.com launched its Kindle Fire at a mass market-fr...
By Miyoung Kim SEOUL (Reuters) - Asian technology companies came under pressure on Thursday to slash prices of their tablet computers after Amazon.com launched its Kindle Fire at a mass market-fr...
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01:50 AM on 10/01/2011
If I wanted to pay a premium price, I would get the Samsung. But if this announcement drives BB to drive down the price of the Playbook, I will be all over it. I might pick up a Kindle Fire as well.
Nightangle
NPA - no party affiliation
03:01 PM on 09/30/2011
'am going for the Samsung.
01:54 PM on 09/30/2011
Tax evaders...
10:37 AM on 09/30/2011
Amazon's margins on the new devices are likely to be pretty thin but its decision to trade profits for a significant foothold in the tablet market is a canny one for the long-term health of the business. for more information visit : http://www.techiecop.com
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CaptainObvvious
Calling me a liberal is a compliment!
09:11 AM on 09/30/2011
This is going to be less an iPad killed and more of an Android ... injurer... Most people who want a high end device are going for iPad... The people who don't are more likely to be looking for something that is cheaper or enough "like an iPad" and with a $199 alternative it will make high end manufacturers have an even harder time against the iPad.
09:54 AM on 09/30/2011
not really, Simon. The ipad isn't "high end" necessarily. Its specs are dated by today's standards and IOS5 is a copycat of Android in features. Fire will take a chunk out of new sales for people who may have been looking at the $500+ tablets but chose something cheaper.
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CaptainObvvious
Calling me a liberal is a compliment!
10:39 AM on 09/30/2011
Android devices NEED faster and stronger hardware to perform on par with iOS because the OS is more demanding.

That is a fact.

It is a sluggish OS that has to be mega specced to get past that. iOS doesn't require the same hardware as Android to perform just as well.

Look at some graphical performance benchmarks and see where the iPad 2 stands.
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buddhistMonkey
My micro-bio is no longer empty
10:57 PM on 09/30/2011
((( "...IOS5 is a copycat of Android in features." )))

That's a bit like picking the pocket of the thief who just robbed your house.
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Tmboy
Reading comments messes with my ZEN, but I'm addic
01:45 AM on 09/30/2011
This will not Kill the iPad, cheaper MP3 Players did not Kill the iPod. People with the moeny to drop for an iPad will still get it. This will be for the people that would NEVER have dropped 500 for an iPad. Me for instance. As for now I think the First nook color looks better than this. If the upgraded one is better designed than this I would go for it over this. Granted I just happen to really like B&N. I'm not an apple hater either, typing this on a MAC I saved many years for and own 3 ipods... yes they all still work. Upgraded the gigs when I got better situated, but what it does I'm not interested in the iPad.
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Bob Metcalfe
Caught at 1st. slip trying to cut
10:18 PM on 09/29/2011
They'r all still TOYS. I have programs that use more storage than you get on those things :-).
09:55 AM on 09/30/2011
these "toys" are being used in businesses. The adoption rate is alarming. You would do well to research before posting.
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mauibob
I am a recovering Liberal. I apologize for my past
11:05 AM on 09/30/2011
Hence the cloud environment.
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Bob Metcalfe
Caught at 1st. slip trying to cut
04:06 PM on 09/30/2011
I have researched and bought a small notebook. I may get a tablet when I can run my programs on them. NO way am I storing my information in a 'cloud'.
09:16 PM on 09/29/2011
Tablets have limited use and are way over priced. They need to be under $200 dollars and have more features than what the ipad currently now has. Screen needs to be at least 10 inches and have a resolution of 1280x800 or better.
09:56 AM on 09/30/2011
in time, grasshopper. These are all still considered 1st gen. Even the ipad3 will be 1st gen with regards to features and specs.
06:09 PM on 09/29/2011
This seems to be contingent on how Samsung and Amazon market their products. The Kindle Fire is just a media machine without a camera or creation based abilities. The Galaxy can better be compared to the Ipad in terms of purpose and design. We'll see if Samsung can justify the price tag with all those extra features in the future.

This is pretty good for us consumers though.
07:16 PM on 09/29/2011
"creation based abilities"? WTF is that? It runs on Android therefore has access to the android market. You can download whatever "creation based apps" are out there and use them. As for a camera, who cares? The ipad2 camera BLOWS and not recommended for anyone needing it for "creation-based applications".

Any company can justify any price if you make it compelling. Apple typically rapes their customers (see mac pro, macbook pro,etc) yet they make it compelling enough for people to want to buy it. Android tablets have only started to be compelling to users. The Kindle Fire will raise that bar. Apple tried to show that most people can afford to live in a "post pc" world. Amazon said "ok... we'll do that, but offer a cheaper tablet to the post pc masses that don't need a crappy camera on a tablet".
08:34 PM on 09/29/2011
Wrong Kindle fire will not have acess to Google Market. Only amazon appstore. Amazon is providing a barebones tablet for media consumption. Rooting of the device may open up ability to be more (dare is say) "creative" with the hardware. That is yet to be seen.
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CaptainObvvious
Calling me a liberal is a compliment!
09:14 AM on 09/30/2011
Aside from the anti Apple ridiculousness you are completely wrong... You bash Apple for being a walled garden but you know what... The Fire can ONLY get apps from Amazon... can ONLY get books from Kindle...

Learn what you're talking about then come back with your anti Apple nonsense.