New Browser Won't Save Amazon's Kindle e-Reader

09.03.2010

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It will take more than an "innovative Web browser" to save Amazon's Kindle e-reader from the onslaught of competitors, including tablets , and seemingly every that owns a soldering iron.

We're talking about this today because of the appearance of a job posting on Amazon's Web site. It says Amazon's Lab126 is looking for help building an "innovative Web browser," widely presumed to be for its Kindle e-reader since the browser is described as "embedded."

Repeating: An innovative Web browser will not stop what is going to happen to Kindle. The device will not be able to compete with next-generation, color-screen tablets that feature e-reader functionality and do more.

Amazon has two choices in responding to the coming e-reader wave: It can either dump prices on the Kindle or develop a competitive tablet-computer-Kindle hybrid device of its own. It could, of course, also do both.

My bet: Two years from now, Kindles will cost between $100 and $200. Obviously, I am expecting Amazon to choose the first option and then exit the e-reader hardware market over some period of time. Or it might stay in the game by private labeling someone else's tablet device and brand it a Kindle.

That bet, however, disregards the job posting, which can be read to vaguely suggest that Amazon wants to go high-end with a device that includes the, ahem, innovative Web browser.

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UMFRAGE
Kommt der Verkaufsstart über Online-Shops mit einem Basissortiment von 2500 Artikeln für den Media Markt noch rechtzeitig?
Ja, der starke Markenname wird den Erfolg bringen.
Ja, aber nur wenn das gesamte Sortiment angeboten wird.
Nein, der Zug ist gegenüber der Konkurrenz abgefahren.
Ich bin unentschieden.
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