Amazon unveils larger Kindle Fire

Jeff Bezos - the CEO and founder of Amazon - holds the new Kindle Fire HD at an introduction of the product in Santa Monica, California.

Jeff Bezos - the CEO and founder of Amazon - holds the new Kindle Fire HD at an introduction of the product in Santa Monica, California.

Published Sep 6, 2012

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Santa Monica - Amazon.com showed off larger and higher-resolution Kindle Fires on Thursday, for as much as $499, taking aim at a fast-growing market now dominated by rival Apple.

Chief Executive Jeff Bezos, taking the stage in Santa Monica, California, unveiled an 8.9-inch version called the Kindle Fire HD. The costliest, 4G-ready version will go for $499, while a Wi-Fi version is $299.

The cheapest, seven-inch version of the Fire, which launched in November and is now the No. 2-selling tablet in the United States, behind Apple's iPad, will go for $159.

Bezos on Thursday stressed that Amazon saw the Kindle family of e-readers and tablets as a service, with hardware a critical element of its digital content business.

Amazon is competing with Apple, Google and other technology companies for a foothold in the booming mobile-device market, because these devices are fast becoming the preferred tool to access consumer media over the Internet. As the world's largest Internet retailer, it is essential for Amazon to have a major presence in this new sector.

Amazon is willing to make little or no money selling cheap tablets and e-readers because it wants to get the devices into as many hands as possible, then sell higher-margin digital content, such as e-books, video, games, apps and music, to a more connected and engaged customer base.

On Thursday, the company also showed off a “paperwhite” e-reader with a much sharper screen and longer battery life.

The 3G wireless version that made digital readers mainstream will sell for $179 starting in October, in time for the crucial holiday season. A Wi-Fi-only version will go for $119, and the cheapest will carry a $69 price tag - undercutting the cheapest Barnes and Noble Nook.

Shares in Amazon, which hit a high earlier on Thursday, were up 1.1 percent at $249. - Reuters

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