New Kindle Fire HD 4G LTE tablet priced like $499 iPad, surprising analysts
Computerworld - Amazon unveiled new e-readers and tablets on Thursday -- the biggest surprise to analysts was a $499 Kindle Fire HD 4G LTE tablet.
The 8.9-in. tablet comes with a 4G LTE wireless data package that costs $49.99 a year for 250 MB of data a month, 20 GB of cloud storage and a $10 Amazon AppStore credit, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said.
The Fire HD with 4G LTE will come with 32 GB of storage and will ship Nov. 20.
In a press release, Amazon indicated that AT&T will allow customers to upgrade to 3 GB or 5 GB data plans directly from the device. The LTE radio chip inside the tablet will work across all 4G bands, Amazon said.
AT&T charges $30 for 3GB a month for tablets and $50 for 5GB a month for tablets under its individual plans.
The $499 tablet was the biggest surprise Thursday because Amazon had previously focused on lower-priced hardware, such as the $199 Kindle Fire launched about a year ago, analysts said.
"With such a big price jump, Amazon is saying that this is not a wireless device for the sake of just wireless, but it is testing the relationship it will have with carriers" and the market at large, said James McQuivey, an analyst at Forrester Research.
"The $499 product means that data plans are a part of Amazon's future, which also might suggest they will produce a smartphone too," he added.
It was widely rumored that Amazon would at least show off a smartphone prototype today, rumors that proved false.
The $499 price is the starting point for the highly popular Apple iPad. Bezos said $499 is the most "popular" price point for a tablet -- probably because the iPad is the most widely purchased tablet.
He said that Amazon decided to focus on what its designers could put into a device for $499. The answer, Amazon decided, was 4G LTE wireless-- "the ultimate tablet feature."
McQuivey said the $499 price is also an indication that Amazon "had to raise the hardware price" in light of Apple's prices, despite Amazon's constant refrain that sales of content and services through its online store can offset razor-thin profits, or even losses, on hardware sales.
The original Kindle Fire recently sold out after less than a year after it started shipping. Sales of the device were in the millions, and took a 22% share of the market, Amazon recently said.
The Kindle Fire components cost about $199, the same as the list price, according to independent teardown analyses.
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