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Kindle Fire Grabs Over Half of the U.S. Android Tablet Market

New submitter DillyTonto writes "Amazon got shelled by analysts and the press after releasing a buggy first iteration of the Fire edition of the Kindle e-reader. Three weeks later the Kindle Fire owned 14 percent of the whole market for tablets. Three months later, more than half of all Android tablets sold in the U.S. are seven-inch Kindle Fires, despite a huge bias among buyers for 10-inch tablets. How could a heavily modded e-reader beat full-size tablets by major PC vendors? It's cheaper than any other tablet or e-reader on the market, for one thing. Also important is its focus on being an e-reader, 'because people buy hardware to have access to one app or function, then take the other things it can do as an additional benefit.'"

12 of 134 comments (clear)

  1. Better Marketing by pavon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think that better marketing, and tie-in to the Amazon eBook store also played huge factors. Otherwise the Nook Color would have dominated long ago, as it has all the same benefits they tout about the Kindle Fire, but released much earlier and was a more polished product at the time of the Kindle Fire release.

    1. Re:Better Marketing by Gideon+Wells · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not sure if marketing or just cultural perceptions. While it isn't so much now, MP3 players were effectively generically iPods for a while. EReaders (I need to look up how to handle eReader words at the beginning of sentences. That just looks weird) are to many Kindle. For some a tablet is an iPad. Until the iPhone came out it wasn't a smartphone, but a Black Berry.

      This was the first color Kindle that was a Kindle. As the summary stated, people are likely buying an eReader instead of a tablet. I know people who are afraid to even sit down at a computer because it is a scary computer (they still exist) who see the Kindle Fire as a fancier and neat book.

      --
      by Anonymous Coward: I, for one, welcome the shift from car analogies to pizza analogies. um.. overlords?
    2. Re:Better Marketing by TechnicalExpert · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's also the most insightful reason:

      Because Android market share on tablets is so small compared to iPad. This makes "android tablet market share" (wtf?) easy to capture to begin with. If people are too poor to get an iPad but want a tablet, they will get the cheapest they can. With Amazon's subsidization (their business model is to make money by selling ebooks, not devices), they are able to sell their device at the lowest price point.

      Basically, news about nothing.

    3. Re:Better Marketing by artor3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Fanboys aren't capable of performing cognitive tasks, such as arithmetic, when the love of their life is involved.

    4. Re:Better Marketing by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Informative

      If people are too poor to get an iPad but want a tablet, they will get the cheapest they can. [...] Basically, news about nothing.

      You know, that would be insightful or interesting or something if you weren't completely wrong. There were and are cheaper android tablets and yet the Fire is still the hero of the day.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  2. They answered the right question, by Kenja · · Score: 4, Insightful

    that being "why would you want to buy a tablet?".

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  3. This write-up is misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. The Fire is not a 'heavily modded e-reader'. E-book readers are traditionally e-paper devices, the Fire is an Android tablet with e-reader functionality highlighted in the software. You can make a tablet an e-reader, but the other way around, not so much.

    2. If more than half the Android tablets sold are 7 inch, then there is no bias among buyers for 10 inch tablets in that category. If you're talking about the entire tablet market, then of course it's 10 inch - the iPad still has more than half the tablet market *in units*.

    All that said, the last part is spot on - it's being marketed as an e-reader with extra features (woo, color!), not as a tablet... even thought that's exactly what it is. A lot of people still don't know what they want from a tablet, but they know what they want from an e-reader. If it does more stuff, all the better. If they want a tablet... statistically speaking, they're already buying an iPad.

  4. ... and delivered at the right price by perpenso · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They answered the right question, that being "why would you want to buy a tablet?".

    And they delivered at the right price. It seemed that most other tablets were in the price neighborhood of the iPad, so people naturally just got an iPad because of the iPad's perception of having more features and apps. With the Kindle Fire coming in at such a relatively lower price they overcame this perception of the iPad.

    I am an iPad dev and when I played with a Kindle Fire at a family Christmas dinner I thought it was a pretty cool device well worth the price, any performance differences or missing apps were more than offset by the price.

  5. Re:How is this surprising? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I dunno if I agree. The Galaxy Tab ain't bad, really. I prefer my iPad, but I don't have any real serious complaints about the Tab. It even has a few things going for it, for example I can actually get emulators through the market. Can't do that with Apple, not without jailbreaking anyway.

    I do think it's a problem of marketing. If you go to Best Buy, for example, you get a nice big display of what the iPad can do for you. When you go to the next aisle, there's something like 20 machines somewhat iPad'ish in shape all with varying price-tags, but none significantly lower than the iPad. I think the casual shopper would walk past that aisle and think "ah, a failed-to-be-cheaper-clone."

    --

    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  6. Re:Kindle Fire is not bad, but too small by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    And apparently it comes with monospaced fonts, which is great for those of us who miss telegraphs and typewriters.

  7. Cheap and good enough beats state of the art... by voss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Which is why eventually the number of Android tablets will surpass the IPAD, even though Apple will still make
    tons of money at the high end.

    The secret of the Kindle Fire is that for now they have found the sweet spot of android tablets. A high enough price
    not to be junk and a low enough price to compete against Ipad and the Fires secret sauce...the backing of amazon.com
    who has the customer service and the money and wont cut and run which gives buyers confidence

    Also Amazon.com unlike the other tablet sellers built up gradually from a successful inexpensive e-reader
      instead of just trying to come up with a "Our version of the ipad"

    .

  8. First, it is slightly cheaper; and second... by tverbeek · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...it has the words "DON'T PANIC" inscribed in large friendly letters on its cover.

    --
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