When Amazon introduced the Fire TV yesterday, much was made about the ability to do voice search on the device. In the linked post, Kirk McElhearn walks through the process of doing the same thing on Apple TV, using the iOS Remote app. Cool beans.
Amazon
Comparing Amazon’s Fire TV with Apple TV, Google Chromecast, Roku boxes
Good side-by-side comparisons in this LA Times piece. You might also want to take a look at this comparison from Forbes.
Amazon following Netflix strategy, greenlights six new Amazon Original Series
Six new series for available exclusively for Amazon Prime Instant Video. More disruption for the TV industry.
Microsoft joins Google and Amazon, announces deep cuts to cloud pricing
First Google announced their price cuts, then Amazon followed suit. Took a while, but that third domino finally fell.
Amazon sends out eBook settlement credits, auto adds them to customer accounts
Last December, publishers Hachette, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Penguin settled their eBook price fixing suits. This morning, Amazon sent out their credit notifications. Here’s mine. Interesting that the credit is for “some” of my past Kindle book purchases. … Continued
Marco Arment’s take on the Amazon Prime price hike
This is a bit of a rant, but there’s logic at the core of Marco’s argument.
Maybe the reason Prime economics have become tricky is because Amazon bundled in a video service nobody wants since 2011, leveraging one business’ extreme success to juice the numbers of one that’s faring poorly against its competitors. Netflix charges $95.88 per year for a similar service. How much of Prime’s price hike was really to help pay for the video service that’s just a tax on Prime members who have never used it and don’t want it?
This is a classic business problem. How do you distinguish a product that is a drag on revenue from a product that has yet to blossom?
The Amazon Prime price hike and what it means to Netflix
I’m a big fan of Amazon Prime, have been since the very first day. The original goal of Prime was to build loyalty. If I’ve already paid my $79 for the year, I get free 2nd day shipping on anything I order through Amazon. And if I already have free 2nd day shipping and the price of an item is as low or lower than anywhere else I could buy it, why would I go elsewhere? Very smart. Here’s why I think the new price hike for Amazon Prime is OK with me and good for Netflix.
Visualizing 15 Years of acquisitions by Apple, Google, Yahoo, Amazon, and Facebook
No specific conclusions leap to mind, but I did find this infographic fun to pore over. Obviously, the biggest circle on there is Facebook’s acquisition of WhatsApp. The second biggest? Take a guess, then follow the link and take a look.
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview now available on Amazon Instant Video
This was a series of interviews Robert Cringely did with Steve back in 1995, when Steve was still CEO of NeXT and Pixar.
Amazon app now uses image recognition to identify products
Point your phone’s camera at a product and the Amazon app will find it in its store.
What Amazon delivered inside that gigantic box
A few days ago, a picture appeared on Reddit showing a flatbed truck loaded with a gigantic Amazon box. If you haven’t seen the picture, click here.
Apple vs Amazon vs Google, told in 9 bar charts
These nine bar charts lay out the stock fundamentals for Apple, Amazon, and Google. Any analyst that follows these companies surely is familiar with all of these. They tell a strong story. Certainly not definitive, but hard to ignore.
Drone feasibility analysis
Thoughtful analysis from MIT Technology Review that slices through the hype and paints a realistic picture of the limitations Amazon will face in bringing drones into service.
New Kindle Fire HDX spot pokes fun at iPad Air and Jony Ive
This new ad does its best to make the case that the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 (what an unwieldy name) is a better buy than the iPad Air.
Bezos reveals plans for 30 minute drone-based delivery
Bezos was on 60 Minutes yesterday and spoke about Amazon’s plans for Prime Air, a 30 minute drone-based delivery service.
How 10 people built an Amazon competitor for $1m, in 90 days
I’m not yet a Box user, but I can see the market niche this company serves. Clearly, they are growing, don’t see a reason this won’t continue. Unless Amazon decides to step on them.
Amazon and USPS to offer Sunday delivery
This is huge news, both for Amazon and for the US Postal Service. Starting with LA and New York, Amazon Prime customers will now get package delivery on Sundays at no extra charge.
Amazon prime customers – who pay a $79 annual charge – will now be able eligible for free two-day shipping on millions of items, and can receive their packages on Sunday. The company announced on Monday that it has teamed up with the U.S. Postal Service and plans to roll the service out to a large portion of the U.S. in 2014 including Dallas, Houston, New Orleans and Phoenix.
USPS has really been struggling, with 7 consecutive quarters in the red.
The semi-independent government agency has suffered in recent years with the introduction of email and the drop in sales from stamps as well as a 2006 congressional mandate to prefund up to 75 years of its future retirees’ health care.
Earlier this year, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe made pleas to lawmakers to allow the financially troubled Postal Service to switch to a five-day delivery schedule for first-class mail in an effort to reduce costs to return the organization to financial stability.
Package deliveries – which was never part of this plea – continues to grow and Donahoe said in the press release on Monday that the Postal Service is very happy to offer shippers like Amazon the option of Sunday deliveries. Research on the websites of rivals FedEx and UPS suggest that the two companies do not currently offer a Sunday delivery service. Both were not immediately available for comment when contacted by CNBC.
The internet and e-commerce have been tremendously disruptive to the Postal Service. This plan will help the USPS find a financial model that allows them to prosper instead of fade. A real win/win.