Demand for Kindle Fire collapses as Apple's iPad continues to dominate

13

Comments

  • Reply 41 of 61
    anantksundaramanantksundaram Posts: 20,408member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Sqeze View Post


    I doubt the sales of the Kindle Fire have collapsed - if they had, Amazon would be selling them world-wide to shift stock, instead of just the USA. 



    No, not likely. Amazon can't simply transfer US audio, video, and e-book permissions other countries. If you can't access those three things, the Fire's a brick.


     


    Add: I see that a couple of others have provided a similar response above.

  • Reply 42 of 61
    stevehsteveh Posts: 480member


    Yes, that and all those Chinese workers that get exploited by Apple that leads them to commit suicide, all those US jobs that Apple won't bring back, the overheating-gate, the 4G-gate, the size gain-gate, the weight gain-gate.... what am I missing?


     


    An actual response?


     


      - Foxconn/Honhai contract out for a lot more customers than just Apple.


     


      - The suicide rate for F/H workers is at or below China's national rates.


     


      - You think that increasing the price of everything they make is going to make customers happy? High-volume manufacturing isn't coming back to the U.S. The only exception seems to be european car makers reducing their costs by setting up non-union manufacturing in the U.S. because european costs are even higher.


     


      - Overheating-gate? Yeah, that turned out to be a major problem... 


     


    Don't give up your day job.


     

  • Reply 43 of 61
    carmissimocarmissimo Posts: 837member
    jragosta wrote: »
    That, of course, assumes that everyone's needs are the same and that there's only one 'right' size for the iPad.
    When first selling the product, it made sense to limit it to a single size. Reduced market confusion and much simpler supply chain. Now that the iPad is a roaring success, it's entirely possible that there will be a 7-8" device. Standard marketing practice.

    No matter what you're perceived needs might be, a smaller screen = a diminshed experience. End of story. It is simply impossible to provide as enjoyable an experience with a screen size significantly smaller than the current iPad. Make the iPad less satisfying to use and Apple's reputation takes a hit. Considering the overwhelming success of the iPad, including the percentage of satisfied customers, there is no reason to mess with that formula. I can tell you exactly what would happen if Apple did make a smaller iPad available. There would be some sales, yes, but then when satisfaction surveys were conducted, instead of a majority of customers for that model expressing their satisfaction with it, the satisifaction rate would drop below 50 per cent. Some of the sales would come at the expense of the current iPad and a percentage of those would regret buying the device that would otherwise have been thrilled with the current iPad version.

    What's in it for Apple?

    Jobs often talked about the importance of what the company decided to not make and I suspect this notion of a smallish tablet that's really not much more portable than the existing iPad is a good example of that.

    Other manufacturers woudln't have had the guts to forsake Flash. Other manufacturers would have rushed to bring a 7-inch version of the iPad to market. In fact, considering how easy it would have been to do so, if Apple hasn't already done so, why would anyone think they intend to. What technical problems could be holding Apple back from offering a 7-inch version of he iPad? Apple hasn't made such a beast available because it doesn't see the point. Neither do I.
  • Reply 44 of 61
    paxmanpaxman Posts: 4,729member


    I think these two experiences are fairly typical. Many were probably returned but I suspect an awful lot are simply gathering dust. I have an Asus Netbook (used half a dozen times) gathering dust in its box somewhere. A hopeless pos that we were given. It - too useless to use, me - too lazy to return it.


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by blakjack View Post



    My step mom bought my dad a fire last November. He's used it a grand total of three times since he's had it. It sits in a drawer catching dust.


     


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by williamh View Post


    My wife bought a Fire right when they came out (preordered I think) and she was quite excited.  However she was quickly frustrated with the performance of the thing, returned it, and went back to her Kindle.  I had an iPad and she questioned the point of it, it didn't appeal to her.  Now she has the "new" iPad and loves it.


     


  • Reply 45 of 61
    triggstriggs Posts: 28member


    Come on guys, you're sounding like a bunch of fanboys.  When the media talks about iPhone sales "collapsing" ahead of a new product launch everyone screams about the outlandish headlines that misrepresent reality.  Yet here is the same report for someone else's product and you're eating it up!  I know this is an Apple site, but come on, have some perspective.  It is widely known that the Kindle leveraged what was already outdated hardware so that they could capitalize on the Christmas sales rush, and had always planned a 2nd gen model for the Spring/Summer time frame.  That time is here and savvy consumers know that the Kindle Fire isn't worth their time until the new product launches.  Amazon has built a very good cloud service, and got much of it in place before Apple did.  Their music locker catered more to users than the music industry, and Amazon took some heat in the press for that.  At the end of the day though, they thought about customers first and made a pretty good product.


     


    Is the Kindle Fire an iPad killer?  No, clearly not.  They'll need to be innovative to compete at the low end against previous gen iPad's, but they are by no means out of the game.


     


    EDIT:  I've only seen a Fire in use once and was thoroughly un-impressed myself.  I'm not willing to pin my thoughts on the future of the Kindle Fire based on what Amazon did with surplus Playbook hardware.  They should get kudos for figuring out how to re-deploy all of that worthless waste manufacturing effort, if nothing else.

  • Reply 46 of 61
    straskstrask Posts: 107member


    This should surprise no one.  The Fire was never anything other than a cynical device aimed at tricking customers into buying a glorified Amazon kiosk. The fact is that the tablet is not so much of a market segment as the iPad is a fantastic, singular consumer item that continues to delight and surprise. Stripping away it's functionality in the name of lower cost doesn't so much create a tablet people can finally afford as it does create an item that isn't really worth owning.  I would bet that even those who claim to be satisfied would qualify that statement with "for the price." But, regardless, people bought the iPad because once they put it in their hands they didn't want to leave it on the shelf.  It's that good.  Until rivals make a product that offers a similarly fantastic user experience the tablet market segment will remain the iPad and all that other crap.

  • Reply 47 of 61
    tallest skiltallest skil Posts: 43,388member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by triggs View Post

    Come on guys, you're sounding like a bunch of fanboys.


     


    Fans of Apple products? On an Apple website? Who could have possibly thought that?!


     


    Quote:


    Yet here is the same report for someone else's product and you're eating it up! I know this is an Apple site, but come on, have some perspective.  It is widely known that the Kindle leveraged what was already outdated hardware so that they could capitalize on the Christmas sales rush…



     


    And yet you're complaining that we're glad sales have nearly flatlined?


     


    Quote:


    …and had always planned a 2nd gen model for the Spring/Summer time frame.  That time is here… 



     


    Hmm. Source?

  • Reply 48 of 61
    suddenly newtonsuddenly newton Posts: 13,819member
    slurpy wrote: »
    Hilarious post, will read again. This 'It's only a matter of time until i-Product reaches apex'  and 'just wait until product X' line is such a horrible, horrible cliche that history proves to be idiotic every single time it's uttered. 

    iPod numbers will start trending downwards now that the Zune is available.
  • Reply 49 of 61
    jragostajragosta Posts: 10,473member
    triggs wrote: »
    Come on guys, you're sounding like a bunch of fanboys.  When the media talks about iPhone sales "collapsing" ahead of a new product launch everyone screams about the outlandish headlines that misrepresent reality. 

    The difference, of course, is that Kindle Fire shipments have been accurately represented and are much larger in magnitude than Apple sales drop before a new model. Typically, iPhone sales might drop 10% before the release of a new model. The Fire shipments dropped by around 80% - and there's no new model in sight. See the difference?

    carmissimo wrote: »
    No matter what you're perceived needs might be, a smaller screen = a diminshed experience. End of story. It is simply impossible to provide as enjoyable an experience with a screen size significantly smaller than the current iPad.

    Even if the first part of your statement were true (that a smaller screen means a diminished experience), that doesn't mean that it's impossible to make a product that is a good, enjoyable, well-received product that's smaller than the current iPad.

    By your logic, Apple shouldn't sell anything but a 17" MacBook Pro and 27" iMac. They also shouldn't sell the 3GS and iPhone 4 at the same time that they sell the iPhone 4S. And there should be no iPod except the highest capacity one.

    After all, the 11" MBA, 13" MBP, 15" MBP, 21" iMac, iPhone 3GS, iPhone4, and other products can't possibly offer every bit as much experience as their larger siblings, right?
  • Reply 50 of 61
    sockrolidsockrolid Posts: 2,789member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post



    But since then, demand for the Kindle Fire has collapsed, as ChangeWave noted that Amazon's device is "floundering."


     


    Not surprising at all.  The Fire simply doesn't have enough power to do more than act as a really fancy e-reader.  An app like Garage Band would bring it to its knees.  And now everyone knows that.


     


    This is both good news and bad news for Apple, but mostly good.  Good news in that any potentially serious competition to iPad has vanished.  Both good and bad news in that demand for a smaller pad form factor has also vanished.  This means that Apple may not need to release a 7" - 8" iPad any time soon.  Keeps the product lineup simpler, which tends to work to Apple's advantage.   But no doubt Apple has spent significant time, effort, and money on developing an iPad mini.  To delay or cancel it now means that Apple may never recoup that investment.


     


    This is also good news for Google.  Larry is probably relieved that Fire sales have plummeted.  Because the Fire runs a forked version of Android 2.3.x, which together with the "main" 2.3.x fork comprises 65% of the total Android installed base.  The latest, greatest version of Android, 4.0, has only been installed on 7.1% of all Android devices.  After a full 7 months of availability.  Developers are looking backward to the most popular version of Android, a legacy version.  Forked, no less.


     


    Google is stuck in the past (December 2010 to be exact) with that huge boat anchor of Android 2.3.x devices out there.  And the fewer Kindle Fires that Amazon sells, the smaller the legacy, forked 2.3.x installed base will be.  So the fewer Kindle Fire sales the better for Google.  Too bad Amazon is about to release a new Kindle Fire.  Should boost sales dramatically.

  • Reply 51 of 61
    triggstriggs Posts: 28member

    Quote:



    Quote:


    …and had always planned a 2nd gen model for the Spring/Summer time frame.  That time is here… 



     


    Hmm. Source?




     


    How about:


    http://www.techradar.com/news/mobile-computing/tablets/amazon-kindle-fire-2-to-get-spring-2012-launch--1041028


     


    or


     


    http://www.techradar.com/news/mobile-computing/tablets/amazon-kindle-fire-2-set-for-january-2012-release-1029917


     


    Both from the same site I know.  I didn't want to spend a lot of time digging up last fall's news.  Note the dates on the articles.


     


     


    Quote:


    And yet you're complaining that we're glad sales have nearly flatlined?



     


    I'm not complaining, just trying to remind folks to maintain some perspective and avoid the herd mentality.  The Fire had a very well publicized purpose (use Playbook hardware to get a product to market fast and capitalize on holiday spending.  Monitor acceptance to gauge the market for this type of device).  Seems like it was a raging success by those metrics.


     


     


    Quote:


    The difference, of course, is that Kindle Fire shipments have been accurately represented and are much larger in magnitude than Apple sales drop before a new model. Typically, iPhone sales might drop 10% before the release of a new model. The Fire shipments dropped by around 80% - and there's no new model in sight. See the difference?



     


    I wasn't aware of any exact numbers on Kindle sales, though I know they've seen a big drop.  The Fire is being hit by lacklulster performance and a depressed market due to (a) all of the pre-owned iPad's from us upgraders and (b) the fact that Apple kept the iPad 2 around at a lower price point.  Personally, I expected a big drop (maybe not 80%), and I am more interested in seeing what the Fire 2 brings as that will really be Amazon's first "real" product where they got to control all aspects of the design.


     


    The bottom line (IMO) is that Amazon is a great company who knows what their customers want and is willing to go to bat for them.  Amazon Prime started out as a fairly lame service but has developed into a position to take on Netflix with minimal additional effort if Amazon so chooses.  Their locker service and cloud player are good offerings, as is the Amazon App Store.  Kindles are excellent, and they've even done an end-around Apple with their HTML5 software that loads on the iPad and bypasses Apple's store altogether.


     


    There is a lot of bashing going on, but I'm just trying to point out that only some of that is probably justified.  Full disclosure - I own both Apple and Amazon stocks, own 2 iPads, 2 iPhones, 1 iMac, but buy most of my music from Amazon.  I have an Amazon Prime account though I don't really use it much for video streaming, and don't use either service for movies.  They both have their gaps, but Amazon has made a pretty good push for the low end, and it's hard to say how successful they will be based solely on a cluged-together gen 1 Fire.

  • Reply 52 of 61
    anantksundaramanantksundaram Posts: 20,408member


    Hmmm.... January is officially over. So second of the two articles can be discounted right away.


     


    The first one -- the one that says "Spring" -- will be discounted in two weeks, I am sure.


     


    And, btw, since you seem to be something of a Fire expert: what's up with the vaunted Amazon 10-incher? Wasn't that supposed to out too?

  • Reply 53 of 61
    triggstriggs Posts: 28member
    [quote]Hmmm.... January is officially over. So second of the two articles can be discounted right away.

    The first one -- the one that says "Spring" -- will be discounted in two weeks, I am sure.

    And, btw, since you seem to be something of a Fire expert: what's up with the vaunted Amazon 10-incher? Wasn't that supposed to out too?
    [/quote]

    As I said I didn't feel like looking up old news. Some sites said Spring, some said summer. Feel free to do your own Googling if you really are interested. Dates change - why didn't the original iPod touch have a camera as planned? Is the Fire 2 still going to be 7"? I don't know, maybe it'll be a 10 incher. I'm no expert on the Fire, but it doesn't take much to look like one around here, apparently.
  • Reply 54 of 61
    alfiejralfiejr Posts: 1,524member


    The V.1 Fire was real sucker bait. came out at right time for the Holiday season, and got lots of hype. so a lot of people who don't know how to assess gadgets but thought a tablet gift for their family would be neat, and are used to buying things on Amazon, fell for the low price and bit. the real satisfaction level is probably a lot less than 46% - all those poor kids that got one of these instead the iPod touch they really wanted.


     


    but that doesn't mean that Amazon's V.2 Fire, probably including a full 10" model too, won't be much improved. we'll have to see what Amazon can deliver at such a low price now with the benefit of experience. but if it's weak, they're toast.

  • Reply 55 of 61
    island hermitisland hermit Posts: 6,217member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Suddenly Newton View Post





    iPod numbers will start trending downwards now that the Zune is available.


     


    RIP Zune.

  • Reply 56 of 61
    island hermitisland hermit Posts: 6,217member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by triggs View Post





    As I said I didn't feel like looking up old news. Some sites said Spring, some said summer. Feel free to do your own Googling if you really are interested. Dates change - why didn't the original iPod touch have a camera as planned? Is the Fire 2 still going to be 7"? I don't know, maybe it'll be a 10 incher. I'm no expert on the Fire, but it doesn't take much to look like one around here, apparently.


     


    Being that you came to the defense of the Fire (seemingly), we figured you must know something that we don't.

  • Reply 57 of 61
    triggstriggs Posts: 28member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by island hermit View Post

     

    Being that you came to the defense of the Fire (seemingly), we figured you must know something that we don't.

     

    I understand what you're saying.  I was really just trying to counter the blind Apple fanaticism, though.  This thread was a bunch of Amazon-bashing without mich thought behind it. Love for Apple's products/design doesn't mean that nobody else can fill a niche in the market.  All said and done, I wouldn't buy the Fire that launched last fall for any price.

     

     

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Alfiejr View Post
     
    but that doesn't mean that Amazon's V.2 Fire, probably including a full 10" model too, won't be much improved. we'll have to see what Amazon can deliver at such a low price now with the benefit of experience. but if it's weak, they're toast.

     

    Now that's the real story.  Amazon got a pass on v.1, held up largely by all of the great work they did to build up their ecosystem.  v.2 has to be a real knockout though, or they're toast.

  • Reply 58 of 61
    nhtnht Posts: 4,522member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by SockRolid View Post


    Not surprising at all.  The Fire simply doesn't have enough power to do more than act as a really fancy e-reader.  An app like Garage Band would bring it to its knees.  And now everyone knows that.


     



     


    The Fire has a bit more ooomph than the iPod Touch but squanders quite a bit of it under Android.  For a $139 it's decent enough.


     


    The TI OMAP 4430 is a 1Ghz Cortex A9 dual core with 512MB RAM and a PowerVR SGX540.  That's kinda halfway between the A4 and the A5.  An app like garageband should work about as well as on the original iPad with the A4 and a 256MB RAM if both devices were running iOS.  The Android in the Fire is a good bit slower than iOS though.


     


    http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/amazon-kindle-fire-review,3076-9.html

  • Reply 59 of 61
    straskstrask Posts: 107member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jragosta View Post





    The difference, of course, is that Kindle Fire shipments have been accurately represented and are much larger in magnitude than Apple sales drop before a new model. Typically, iPhone sales might drop 10% before the release of a new model. The Fire shipments dropped by around 80% - and there's no new model in sight. See the difference?

    Even if the first part of your statement were true (that a smaller screen means a diminished experience), that doesn't mean that it's impossible to make a product that is a good, enjoyable, well-received product that's smaller than the current iPad.

    By your logic, Apple shouldn't sell anything but a 17" MacBook Pro and 27" iMac. They also shouldn't sell the 3GS and iPhone 4 at the same time that they sell the iPhone 4S. And there should be no iPod except the highest capacity one.

    After all, the 11" MBA, 13" MBP, 15" MBP, 21" iMac, iPhone 3GS, iPhone4, and other products can't possibly offer every bit as much experience as their larger siblings, right?


    It is possible to make an enjoyable device with a smaller screen.  Check out the regular Kindle.  Or an iPhone.  But a multi-purpose, interactive device that is good for reading and basic word processing and gaming and watching video content and making music etc is simply not as enjoyable on a screen the size of the FIre.  I think that is the argument.  Amazon cobbled together the Fire with whatever parts they could afford or get their hands on and with the prime design goal being a price point, not a user experience. And voila! users don't like it.

  • Reply 60 of 61
    jragostajragosta Posts: 10,473member
    strask wrote: »
    It is possible to make an enjoyable device with a smaller screen.  Check out the regular Kindle.  Or an iPhone.  But a multi-purpose, interactive device that is good for reading and basic word processing and gaming and watching video content and making music etc is simply not as enjoyable on a screen the size of the FIre.  I think that is the argument.  Amazon cobbled together the Fire with whatever parts they could afford or get their hands on and with the prime design goal being a price point, not a user experience. And voila! users don't like it.

    "not as enjoyable" doesn't mean that it's not possible or useful.

    Lots of people surf the web or watch movies on their iPhone with a 3.5" screen. What makes you think that they wouldn't enjoy doing that even more on a 7" iPad?

    For some people (maybe even most people), a 7" iPad would be too small. But not everyone. There are apparently plenty of people who prefer the smaller tablet. Consider, for example, that Android tablets are available in both 7" and 10" sizes. By most reports, they two roughly split the market - that is, about 1/2 of the market is 7" and half is 10". So, when given a choice, roughly half of the people choose the smaller version. Yet your same argument (it's not as enjoyable on a smaller screen) applies to Android, so apparently, there's something that makes up for the 'not as enjoyable' factor. It may be portability, it may be price, but the smaller model also has some advantages, as well. In the end, when you give people the choice (as in Android), about half choose the smaller screen. I don't see anything that suggests that the same thing wouldn't be true for the iPad.
Sign In or Register to comment.