Friday, 31 August 2012

Kindle Fire sold out in U.S. fuelling speculation release of new version is imminent

Kindle Fire sold out in U.S. fuelling speculation release of new version is imminent

 

Kindle Fire, Amazon's digital reader has sold out in the United States, sparking speculation that the release of a new version is imminent.
The internet retailer has a major press conference scheduled for next Thursday in Santa Monica, California.
It's widely expected to reveal a new model of the Fire there, so the announcement that the first model is 'sold out' suggests that Amazon halted production a while ago to retool for a new model.
Sell out: Kindle is widely expected to reveal a new model of the Fire, so the announcement that the first model is 'sold out' suggests that Amazon halted production a while ago to retool for a new model
Sell out: Kindle is widely expected to reveal a new model of the Fire, so the announcement that the first model is 'sold out' suggests that Amazon halted production a while ago to retool for a new model
Seattle-based Amazon launched the $199 tablet last November.
It was the first Kindle with a color screen and the ability to run third-party applications, placing it in competition with Apple Inc.'s iPad, at half the price of the cheapest iPad.
 
Amazon doesn't say how many Fires it has sold, but says it captured 22 percent of U.S. tablet sales over nine months.
That would make it the second-most popular tablet, after the iPad.
Based on iPad sales reported by Apple, Fire sales can be estimated at somewhere around 5 million units.
Sales: Amazon doesn't say how many Fires it has sold, but says it captured 22 percent of U.S. tablet sales over nine months
Sales: Amazon doesn't say how many Fires it has sold, but says it captured 22 percent of U.S. tablet sales over nine months. That would make it the second-most popular tablet, after the iPad
Separately, ABI Research said today that sales of dedicated e-readers, like the non-Fire, black-and-white Kindles, peaked last year.
It expects worldwide sales of e-readers at 11 million in 2012, down from 15 million in 2011.
The research firm expects tablets to outsell e-readers nine to one this year, despite costing four or five time as much.
Still, e-readers won't go away completely, ABI analyst Joshua Flood said.
'We believe there will always be a niche market for the dedicated reading device for voracious readers, business travelers, and educational segments, particularly ones that are low-priced,' Flood said.
Amazon could update the rest of its Kindle line at next week's event, too.
The current models were launched a year ago.
In the intervening time, competitor Barnes & Noble Inc. has launched a Nook e-reader with a built-in screen illuminator for reading in the dark.
Amazon itself was the main outlet for the Kindle Fire.
However, Staples stores recently sold it for $179.

 

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