Amazon Kindle Fire tablet lands at US$200

Amazon Kindle Fire tablet lands at US$200
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos shows off the Android-based Kindle Fire in New York

Amazon's Kindle Fire tablet has been unveiled as a 7in Android-based tablet, at an astonishingly low price of $US199 ($A203).

The long-awaited device, unveiled in New York on Wednesday, ships 15 November with preorders starting immediately. Amazon said it won't be available outside the US. (In other words, don't get your hopes up for an Australian release.)

Amazon also unveiled an update to its Kindle ebook reader line-up, including the first touch screen edition - click here for the full details.

It features a dual-core processor and 8GB of storage, Gorilla Glass IPS display, and weighs under 500 grams. Amazon promises battery life of eight hours when reading or 7.5 hours if playing video.

A demo from CEO Jeff Bezos suggested it supports multitasking. It will not come with 3G, limiting users to Wi-Fi. It also doesn't have a camera or a microphone, according to reports.

While it is based on Android, that has been overlaid with Amazon's own UI linked to the online retailer's content collection. Apps will be quality tested to ensure they work on the Amazon UI, the company said, and the device comes with an email client built in.

The Kindle Fire comes with a free 30-day trial of Amazon's Prime, which now includes streaming video.

The company's Whispersync - which keeps track of which page of a book you're on, if you flip to a different device - has been extended to film and TV shows, letting users switch from the tablet to their TV, for example, without having to find the same spot in their show again - although it wasn't clear exactly how that would work.

Bezos said the device ties together Amazon's cloud, content services, Kindle platform and retail experience. Everything on the Fire will automatically be backed up to the cloud, so users can delete it from the tablet without losing it completely.

Along with that, Bezos unveiled Amazon Silk, a "cloud-acclerated" mobile browser system for the Fire. It uses "Dynamic Split Browsing" to optimise content in the cloud before sending it down to the device, to boost how quickly pages load.

You can check out Amazon's first advert for the Kindle Fire below:

Source: Copyright © PC Pro, Dennis Publishing

See more about:  amazon kindle  |  kindle  |  kindle fire
 
 

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Comments: 5
amcmo
29 September 2011
Ok it's somewhat limited, and if the reports of it being a stripped down Playbook clone are true, then I wouldn't hold out for sparkling app performance.

At that price it might be worth grabbing one through our US office just for the Amazon market features.


Comment made about the PC & Tech Authority article:
Amazon Kindle Fire tablet lands at US$200?
Amazon's Kindle Fire tablet has been unveiled as a 7in Android-based tablet, at an astonishingly low price of $US199 ($A203).

What do you think? Join the discussion.
photohounds
29 September 2011
Pidgeons, oh pidgeons - where are you???



The Cat


.
pvisser
29 September 2011
Another article said Amazon pitches this against RIM's Playbook - they win that one as the latter looks to go the way of HP's tablet.
I thought hard about getting a Kindle but lack of colour screen and having to convert PDFs held me back. Now the Fire.. and with email client built in? That means it does just about all I do with my ipad. And at half the price! Finally someone seems to get it right.
amcmo
29 September 2011
Just be aware that, the same company that designed the Playbook designed this and used the Playbook as the basis.

Every article I have read points to slower processor, only 8G of RAM, and Android 2.3 as the basis of the forked Amazon only version.

Still at that price, if the limitations are not important to you it's not a bad ebook reader and email client.
amcmo
1 October 2011
Further info from the US. An evaluation of the components shows a build cost of just over $200.

Puts the lie to the claims from some that 10" tablets should sell for $250-300.

Amazon are one of the few companies able to sell for below cost and make their money from book, music and video sales.
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