Khaleej Times

Here’s why Amazon refreshed its cheapest tablets

- Mark Gurman

Amazon.com updated its least-expensive tablets, continuing to produce new and updated hardware as a way to attract consumers to its more profitable services.

The online retailer and consumer electronic­s maker announced upgrades to its best-selling seveninch Fire tablet, giving it a slightly thinner and lighter design, an extra hour of battery life, support for higher-speed wireless connectivi­ty, and new colours. Amazon cut the price on the larger Fire HD 8 tablet by $10 and said it’s giving the rugged tablets for kids a makeover as well.

Amazon doesn’t break out sales numbers for its tablets, but the company has been expanding into low-cost gadgets as a way to get into people’s homes and convert them into loyal consumers. It sees customer retention as a way to profitabil­ity, more so than individual gadgets. Seattle-based Amazon makes the majority of its money from Internet services, such as Amazon Prime video streaming, which it sells for the tablets. Both upgraded models include the Alexa voice assistant, allowing consumers to ask to play videos, listen to music and shop through the device.

While the overall tablet market has slowed, Amazon says its business is still growing. Last year, Amazon recorded double-digit tablet growth in the US, according to Kevin Keith, the manager in charge of the unit. Amazon had about 10 per cent of the tablet market, in the fourth quarter last year, compared with 25 per cent for Apple’s iPad, according to market researcher IDC. Amazon shipped more than five million tablets in the period, IDC said. Amazon’s tablet launch marks another hardware refresh for the company. In April, it debuted the Echo Look camera, a device that uses artificial intelligen­ce to evaluate a person’s wardrobe. Earlier this month, the long-anticipate­d Echo Show, an Alexa speaker with a large touch screen, was announced. This week, the company also said that it will begin shipping television­s running its Fire OS software in June. Amazon is not making the screens, but it’s instead partnering with TV-maker Westinghou­se Electric. The new tablets begin shipping in June, Amazon said.

The updated seven-inch Fire tablet is less than 10 per cent thinner than its predecesso­r, but includes a screen with better contrast for book reading, Amazon said in a briefing ahead of the official announceme­nt on Wednesday. The battery life is increasing from seven hours to eight hours, which compares with 10 hours on iPads and 12 hours on the Fire HD tablet with an eight-inch screen.

The seven-inch Fire is one of the cheapest name-brand tablets on the market, at $50 for an 8 GB configurat­ion and $70 for a model with double the storage. The 8-inch model now costs $80 for a 16 GB configurat­ion and $110 for 32 GB of storage. Amazon is also releasing new tablets oriented toward kids: the refreshed seven-inch tablet and the eight-inch tablet with bumper cases in different colours.

The Alexa voice control service will also become available on tablets for the first time in the UK with the new models, Amazon said.

Older tablets will gain support for Alexa in the UK with a future software update. Amazon added support for Alexa on the Fire TV set-top-box in the UK earlier this year. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? While the overall tablet market has slowed, Amazon says its business is still growing. — Bloomberg
While the overall tablet market has slowed, Amazon says its business is still growing. — Bloomberg

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