This week, Amazon announced the availability of Kindle Oasis, a new high-end addition to its black and white e-reader lineup.
Early yesterday morning my ZDNet colleague and hardware columnist, Adrian Kingsley-Hughes, was quick to point out just how high-end this is -- it's $290 for the Wi-Fi only model.
It'll cost you $70 additional for 3G, and another $20 if you want to remove the advertisements on the lock screen.
You could buy almost four regular Kindles at $80 apiece for the price of one of these in its basic config.
Four.
Who
wants to buy one of these? Someone with a lot of money to burn? Maybe.
But I think Amazon is a smart company and has done enough research to
know they have a market for this thing.
What we can say for sure about Amazon is that with the Kindle Oasis, the company has hit its peak Apple moment.
What do I mean by that, exactly?
Amazon has clearly reached a point in its evolution with
the Kindle that it has achieved near-monopolistic market control, apex
agility in terms of managing its supply chain, and sustained consumer
zealotry for its devices, much like Apple has with its iPhone and iPads.
Its customers love them and keep coming back to buy new ones, again and again.
Part
of this is due to the company's fantastic customer-first focus and its
Prime program which brings more and more added benefits every year that
leverages Amazon's many online services, and the excellent industrial
design of the Kindles themselves.
Like Apple, Amazon can create very large margins for these things and
basically nobody will baulk because you can't buy a Kindle
ecosystem-compatible e-paper reader anywhere else.
Amazon now has
stratification across the Kindle product line to basically please
everyone and still have very good margins. In some ways they are in
better shape than Apple in this regard because they have a $80 device
all the way up to a $380 device.
And unlike Apple that has to
compete with Android, the Kindle competes with essentially nothing. All
of its competitors in the e-paper space have either exited the market or
have very little market share to speak of.
Sony's reader business is long gone. Barnes & Noble's NOOK business is on life support and is begging for euthanasia.
Kobo
has produced some nice hardware, it competes fairly well in the global
market, and the company appears to be healthy. However it only has
single to low double digit market penetration in the US when compared
with Amazon's e-book and content business.
The Kindle e-books platform rules the space, in both hardware and as a content delivery platform. Mission accomplished.
So, getting back to Kindle Oasis. I don't know how many folks are going to buy a high-end reader like this. I thought $200 for the Kindle Voyage, which was previously Amazon's flagship reader device, was a lot of money. This thing is even more expensive.
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