Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Amazon's Latest Kindle Mostly Wants To Disappear

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Apr, 2016 11:40 AM
    NEW YORK — Will loyal fans of e-books be willing to pay tablet prices for dedicated e-readers? Amazon is about to find out.
     
    The e-commerce giant's latest Kindle is its smallest and lightest yet. But it's also the most expensive, at $290 — almost a hundred bucks more than the current champ, the $200 Kindle Voyager. Now the company is betting that its sleek frame and a cover that doubles as a rechargeable battery will attract dedicated e-book users to its eighth generation device, called the Kindle Oasis.
     
    Amazon says the new Kindle is 30 per cent thinner and 20 per cent lighter than previous Kindles. It's also asymmetrical, with a grip on one side for one-handed reading. (Lefties can just flip the device over.)
     
    The company's goal? "To make the device disappear," said Neal Lindsay, vice-president of Amazon Devices, so that people can read without distraction.
     
    The e-reader landscape has experienced a few plot twists since Amazon introduced the first Kindle in 2007. Sales surged for a few years, but started levelling off around 2012 as e-readers grew more commonplace. They even dipped slightly in 2013 but then rose 3.8 per cent to $3.37 billion dollars in 2014, according to the most recent stats available from the Association of American Publishers.
     
    Although the market has matured, it's still a growing category for Amazon year-over-year, the company says. (It doesn't, though, release sales figures.) Meanwhile, Amazon has launched several other devices, including its Kindle Fire tablets, Fire TV streaming stick and set top box, and the Echo smart speaker.
     
    But dedicated e-readers help drive e-book sales at Amazon, which publishes many itself via Kindle Direct Publishing. They can also serve as a gateway drug that helps draw people to other goods and deals on Amazon, including its Prime membership program.
     
    "If you pick up a Kindle and read a book, eventually that may translate into watching Prime instant videos, joining Prime, or buying a physical book," said R.W. Baird analyst Colin Sebastian.
     
    Like previous Kindles, the Oasis features a black-and-white screen designed to make reading easier. It features two batteries — one in the e-reader and another in its cover — which together stretch the battery life to 9 weeks of "regular" reading (30 minutes a day by Amazon's definition) or months on standby. The Oasis and its cover charge simultaneously via one port.
     
    You might wonder why Amazon keeps making more expensive Kindles, given that they do a lot less than the average tablet. In essence, they're intended to keep a demanding bunch happy.
     
    E-reader users are on their devices 4 to 5 hours a week on average, said Peter Hildrick-Smith, president of the consulting firm Codex. They're far more dedicated than tablet readers, who only manage about an hour a week.
     
    With e-readers like the Oasis, Amazon is "looking to keep their e-reading on the cutting edge," Hildrick-Smith said. "What it's not doing is appealing to people who aren't already reading e-books."
     
    Global preorders for the Oasis start Wednesday; the device will ship on April 27. Amazon is still selling its basic Kindle for $80, the Kindle Paperwhite with a high resolution display and adjustable front light for $120, and the Kindle Voyage with page press buttons for $200.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Twitter Marks 10th Birthday Searching For Followers, Profits

    Twitter Marks 10th Birthday Searching For Followers, Profits
    The world's first tweet, which was sent by co-founder Jack Dorsey on March 21, 2006, read "just setting up my twttr."

    Twitter Marks 10th Birthday Searching For Followers, Profits

    Johns Hopkins Researchers Find Flaw In iMessage Encryption

    Johns Hopkins Researchers Find Flaw In iMessage Encryption
    A team from Johns Hopkins University says it found a security bug in iMessage, the encrypted messaging platform used on Apple's phones and other devices. The bug would allow hackers under certain circumstances to decrypt some messages.

    Johns Hopkins Researchers Find Flaw In iMessage Encryption

    Facebook Explores If Jobs Run In Families Like Genes

    Not only genes, even jobs may run in some families, and people within a family are proportionally more likely to eventually also choose the same occupation and this is especially true of twins, a Facebook study has revealed.

    Facebook Explores If Jobs Run In Families Like Genes

    Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro

    Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro
    Aiming to make deeper inroads into the emerging markets like India and China, tech giant Apple on Monday stunned its rivals by launching a cheaper, smaller yet powerful iPhone SE and a game changer 9.7-inch iPad Pro

    Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro

    Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

    If that sounds familiar, it's because that's how Facebook decides what to show users of its online social network. 

    Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

    Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

    Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment
    Self-driving cars are "absolutely not" ready for widespread deployment despite a rush to put them to put them on the road, a robotics expert warned Tuesday.

    Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment