WebProNews

Tag: Amazon

  • Amazon Introduces “Elastic Beanstalk” for Easy App Deployment

    Amazon announced a new product for Amazon Web Services today, called "AWS Elastic Beanstalk". The product, a new way for developers to deploy and manage apps in the AWS cloud, handles things like capacity provisioning, load balancing, auto-scaling, and app health monitoring.

    Elastic Beanstalk leverages AWS services such as Amazon EC2, Amazon S3, Amazon Simple Notification Service, Elastic Load Balancing, and Auto-Scaling for infrastructure, which as the company points out, are already used by hundreds of thousands of businesses. Developers don’t need to be familiar with these services to get their apps running quickly, however, according to the company. 

    Amazon Web Services Gets Elastic BeanstalkThey only need to upload their app to Elastic Beanstalk, and behind the scenes, the product handles the provisioning and deployment of the infrastructure needed to run the app. Amazon says that within a few minutes, the app can be accessed via a customized URL. 

    "Elastic Beanstalk is easy to begin and impossible to outgrow," said Adam Selipsky, VP of Amazon Web Services. "It automatically scales up or down as needed and developers don’t need to worry about the configuration required to set up their infrastructure on AWS."

    "We’d been grappling with how to simplify application deployment and management on AWS without removing the flexibility and control our customers have come to expect," added Selipsky,"Once we started exploring the mental model of customers being able to ‘open the hood’ to tinker with the infrastructure management themselves, a light bulb went off and we realized we didn’t have to make this ‘either/or’ decision. AWS customers can now choose to have as much automation or as much control as they wish."

    Amazon says that with Elastic Beanstalk and the AWS Free Usage Tier, getting started on AWS can be free.

  • Amazon Launches Daily Deal App For iPhone

    Amazon has introduced a free application for iPhone users called Amazon Deals, which offers daily deals from  Amazon Gold Box.

    People can use the app to act on limited-availability discounts and stay up to date with deal notifications.

    Amazon-Deals

    “With Amazon Deals, no matter where they are, our customers can stay connected and informed on deals in their favorite categories and purchase from their iPhone immediately, before they sell out, so they never have to miss another deal,” said Sam Hall, director of Amazon Mobile.

    The Amazon Deals app includes access to customer reviews, product information; sharing via email, Twitter and Facebook.

    Amazon’s family of mobile shopping applications includes Price Check by Amazon for iPhone, Amazon Windowshop for iPad and the Amazon App for iPhone, iPad, Blackberry and Android-based devices.

     

  • Amazon Introduces Kindle App For Windows Phone 7

    Amazon continues to make its Kindle app available on more and more devices, the latest is Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7.

    Yesterday, Amazon announced the launch of its Kindle app for Android and Windows based tablets. Amazon says Kindle for Windows Phone 7 is the first major eBook app available for the device, and includes new features built into the app for the first time, including personalized recommendations integrated into the Kindle app home screen and the ability to send book recommendations to a friend without leaving the app.

    Windows-Phone-7

    “With Kindle books you never have to worry about what to do if you change devices or platforms. Our free ‘Buy Once, Read Everywhere’ apps make it easy for you to read your books on any device you choose – your Kindle, Kindle 3G, Kindle DX, iPad, iPhone, PC, Mac, BlackBerry, Android-based device, and now your Windows Phone 7-based device,” said Dorothy Nicholls, Director, Amazon Kindle.

    “We think customers are going to love our new Kindle app on the unique interface of Windows Phone 7 and the convenience of our Whispersync technology, which saves and synchronizes your bookmarks, notes and highlights between all of your devices.”

    Other features of Kindle for Windows Phone 7 include:

    *Kindle’s Worry-Free Archive automatically backs up your Kindle library on Amazon, so your books can be re-downloaded wirelessly anytime.

    *Integrated shopping experience allows you to shop without leaving the app.

    *Send an email to a friend with a link to the book you’re reading or to any book in your library without leaving the app.

     

  • Amazon Appstore for Android Apps Should Help Android

    Amazon has launched its Appstore Developer Portal, aimed at letting Android developers submit apps for the launch of the Amazon Appstore for Android. The date of this launch is still undetermined. 

    "The sheer number of apps available today makes it hard for customers to find high-quality, relevant products – and developers similarly struggle to get their apps noticed," says Amazon’s Appstore Team.  "Amazon’s innovative marketing and merchandising features are designed to help customers find and discover relevant products from our vast selection, and we’re excited to apply those capabilities to the apps market segment."

    "Our customers also have a strong interest in mobile, and across the company we are working hard to make our great products and services available on mobile devices," the team adds. "We continue to innovate the mobile shopping experience with the Amazon Shopping app, Amazon Price Check and the recently launched Windowshop for the iPad. We have numerous Kindle apps, and customers can shop our MP3 store from their mobile devices. Our subsidiaries like IMDB and Audible also have robust mobile applications.  An Appstore is a logical next step for Amazon in mobile."

    Amazon App Store Launches to Developers
    For developers wondering why they should submit to Amazon’s store, the company says that for the first time, they’ll have access to tens of millions of active Amazon customers, as well as Amazon’s marketing and merchandising features, and the convenience for customers to use existing Amazon accounts for purchasing apps online or on their mobile devices. 

    Naturally, cries of fragmentation are being uttered throughout the tech Blogosphere, and as Jason Kincaid notes, Verizon working on its own app store as well, and others will likely come later. He also got the followings statement from Google: 

    "Android is an open platform – and entities other than Google are free to create their own content and marketplaces, much like the web."

    If Google wants users to go to the Android Market as their main destination for Android Apps, it’s going to have to do some sprucing up of that Market and possibly offer some tools to combat what Amazon and others may offer down the line. That said, you have to wonder how important Google deems it for users to get their apps through the actual Android Market. The users are still buying Android apps either way, and that can only be good for the operating systems. Given the potential reach of such an offering from Amazon, it could be great for Android. 

    It remains to be seen if results from Amazon’s appstore will turn up in Google search results, but if so, it simply means more visibility for Android apps.

  • Analyst Says Amazon To Earn $100B In Revenue In 2015

    Everyone awed by Facebook’s $50 billion valuation may want to break away for at least a moment to consider Amazon’s future.  An analyst with Morgan Stanley has predicted that Amazon will generate an impressive $100 billion in revenue in 2015.

    To put that in perspective: Amazon reported $7.56 billion in revenue during the third quarter of 2010, $6.57 billion during the second quarter, $7.13 billion during the first quarter, and $9.52 billion during the fourth quarter of 2009 (totaling $30.78 billion), so $100 billion in a single year will represent a huge increase.

    Still, summing up a report authored by Morgan Stanley’s Scott Devitt, Larry Dignan wrote, "Amazon is likely to hit $100 billion in annual revenue and is on a growth path that eclipses the world’s most successful retailer – Wal-Mart."

    That’s in part because "[i]nternational expansion continues," "[n]ew efforts such as Amazon Web Services and digital sales via the Kindle platform are promising," and "[s]ubscription e-commerce for grocery staples is another promising avenue."

    Also, as reported by Dignan, "Amazon can fuel growth just by taking wallet share from its existing customers. Amazon’s 121 million customers spend about $275 a year.  Wal-Mart’s 300 million customers spend $750 a year excluding groceries and Sam’s Club."

    This situation will definitely bear watching.  And for what it’s worth, Amazon’s stock rose 0.43 percent during normal trading hours today and is up another 0.08 percent so far in after-hours trading.

  • Amazon Kindle Optimized for Android and Windows Tablets

    It’s become crystal clear that Amazon’s Kindle is a hit, and though some of its competitors have been doing pretty well too, Kindle was recently revealed to be Amazon’s best-selling product ever

    You don’t have to own a Kindle to read Kindle books though. Amazon has gone out of its way to bring in Kindle lovers who may happen to own an iPhone, and Android phone, an iPad, etc. Owners of these devices won’t necessarily want another device to carry around, and why should they when they can just download an app to the one they’re already carrying around and read Kindle books from there? 

    Amazon is now bringing Kindle to a slew of other devices, as the company announced the release of Kindle apps specifically tailored to Android and Windows-based tablets. Last year, Amazon launched a special Kindle iPad app, and now other growing tablet devices will have their own versions as well. 

    Kindle for AndroidThe timing for these apps couldn’t be better. This week is the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, in which manufacturers will unveil numerous new tablets, thirstily going for the iPad’s throat. Many of these will run Android and Windows. Kindle, the established e-reader and widely loved brand can only help these devices’ chances of attracting consumers as an alternative to Apple’s popular iPad. 

    Amazon does hope people will be happy to carry around both a tablet and a Kindle, or at least both in different circumstances. "Kindle is light weight, easy on the eyes with a paper-like Pearl e-ink display, and has a full month of battery life. It’s purpose-built for reading. Many people are buying both a Kindle and an LCD tablet computer," said Dorothy Nicholls, Amazon’s Director of Kindle. "We’re very excited to support the upcoming Android and Windows LCD tablet computers with free Kindle apps that we’ll tailor for the particular devices."

    "Our Whispersync technology makes it simple to move back and forth between devices. Read on your Kindle, read on your tablet, read on your phone," adds Nicholls. "We’ll keep track of your last page read, and make it easy."

    Will the Kindle Continue to Thrive as a Device?

    2011 is going to be an interesting year for the Kindle, and the e-reader and tablet spaces. 2010 was a great year for Amazon’s product, but the new tablet market is just getting started. The iPad was available for most of 2010, but we’re really only now going to start seeing the competition heating up and the wider adoption of this kind of device. 

    Amazon’s Kindle is going to have to compete with devices that do a lot more things than let users read books. Amazon is going to have to continue to innovate with its Kindle to give consumers reasons to own them. 

    I believe the Kindle brand will live a great deal longer in app and e-book form than in device form, despite an impressive year. Amazon is smart to optimize the Kindle experience across as many devices as possible, but at the same time, doesn’t it reduce the need for the Kindle itself? 

    According to Forrester, tablet sales will more than double in the U.S. this year. 

  • Amazon, Netflix Earn Top Customer Satisfaction Scores

    People who shop for things online wind up happiest when they buy from companies including Amazon, Netflix, Newegg, Apple, and eBay, according to new research.  ForeSee Results’s E-Retail Satisfaction Index ranked these sites among the best online retailers in the U.S.

    Indeed, based on a survey of almost 10,000 people who had recently visited the top 40 retail sites, Amazon and Netflix actually tied for first place with scores of 86 for "shopper satisfaction."  That’s compared to an average score of 76 for the top 40 group as a whole.

    Then, as you can see from the table below (cut short to just show the top 10 companies), QVC, Avon, and L.L. Bean followed in third, fourth, and fifth place, with Newegg, Apple, eBay, Musician’s Friend, VistaPrint, Walmart, and Williams-Sonoma behind them.

    Those rankings aren’t irrelevant to the businesses’ performance, either.  Granted, price is still an important factor, but customer satisfaction plays a significant role.

    ForeSee Results explained in its report, "[H]ighly-satisfied visitors to retail websites say they are 60% more committed to the brand overall, 61% more likely to purchase from the retailer online, 35% more likely to purchase from the retailer offline, and 64% more likely to recommend the retailer than are dissatisfied visitors."

    "There is a powerful and quantifiable relationship between a good customer experience online and increased loyalty, sales, and recommendations," the report then concluded.

  • Amazon Shows What People Bought (and Wanted) Most in 2010

    Amazon released its "Best of 2010" lists today, which list the bestselling, most-wished-for, and most popular gift products of the year. 

    Kindle Dominates Electronics

    It’s been a good year for Amazon’s own Kindle, as it was the bestselling product of the year, as well as the most wished for and the most popular gift, in the electronics  category. "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" was the bestselling Kindle book, and the most wished for Kindle book. Interestingly enough, George W. Bush’s "Decision Points" was the most popular gift Kindle book. 

    Wireless

    In the Wireless & Accessories category, the Samsung Captivate Android Phone (AT&T) was the bestselling product. The most wished for was the LG KP500 Cookie Unlocked Phone. The most gifted was the Nokia N900 Unlocked Phone/Mobile Computer. 

    Computers

    In computers, the Apple MacBook Pro 13.3-Inch Laptop was the bestselling and the most wished for. The Toshiba Satellite TruBrite 15.6-Inch Laptop was the most gifted. 

    MacBook Pro is a big seller in 2010

    Software

    Microsoft should be happy (and Google not so much), as Microsoft Office 2010 Home & Student was the bestselling and most wished for product in software. Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 (Win/Mac) was the most gifted. 

    Movies

    In movies, "The Blind Side" was the bestselling DVD, and Sherlock Holmes was the bestselling in the Video on Demand category. Meanwhile, Inception was the most wished for DVD (it’s been out for a much shorter amount of time than the Blind Side), and "Dexter: The Fourth Season" was the most wished for in Video on Demand. Toy Story 3 was the most popular gift movie. 

    Music

    In music, "The Gift" by Susan Boyle was bestselling (also most gifted),  "Speak Now" by Taylor Swift was the bestselling MP3 Album (also the most wished for in music). The bestselling MP3 song was  "I Gotta Feeling" by The Black Eyed Peas.

    Games

    In the video games category, Call of Duty: Black Ops was the bestselling and most wished for, but Just Dance 2 was the most gifted. 

    The Rest

    It looks like Santa was checking the kids’ wishlists, as LEGO building sets were both the most wished for and the most gifted item in the toys category. 

    You can get a look at the complete lists here. They show a lot more categories, like Books, Home, Garden & Pets, Grocery, Health & Personal Care, Beauty, Baby, Clothing & Accessories, Shoes & Accesories, Jewery, Watches, Sports & Outdoors, Home Improvement, and Automotive. 

    While Amazon is only one online retailer, it is the largest, and these lists should paint a pretty good picture of what people have been buying and wanting in 2010.

  • Kindle Becomes Best-Selling Amazon Product Ever

    The first Amazon Kindle was released more than three years ago, and for whatever reason, Amazon still won’t share exact sales figures concerning the device.  But this morning, the company did see fit to disclose one important fact: the third-generation Kindle has become the bestselling product in Amazon’s history.

    To put that in perspective: "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" previously held the title, and that franchise has had national reading programs, Halloween tie-ins, a string of hit movies, and even a theme park help boost its sales.

    It’s not like a trickle of holiday-related purchases just happened to push the Kindle over the top, either.  Amazon said in a statement, "On Christmas Day, more people turned on new Kindles for the first time, downloaded more Kindle Buy Once, Read Everywhere apps, and purchased more Kindle books than on any other day in history."

    So it appears the Kindle will hold onto first place for quite a while.  Indeed, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos reasoned/advertised, "We’re seeing that many of the people who are buying Kindles also own an LCD tablet. . . .  They report preferring Kindle for reading because it weighs less, eliminates battery anxiety with its month-long battery life, and has the advanced paper-like Pearl e-ink display that reduces eye-strain, doesn’t interfere with sleep patterns at bedtime, and works outside in direct sunlight, an important consideration especially for vacation reading."

    Then Bezos pointed out, " Kindle’s $139 price point is a key factor – it’s low enough that people don’t have to choose."

    The most-purchased Kindle book on Christmas Day was "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," by the way.

  • Groupon Appoints Amazon Exec CFO

    Groupon Appoints Amazon Exec CFO

    The company that supposedly turned down a $6 billion acquisition offer from Google has now given another sign that it has some very interesting financial plans.  Groupon announced today that it’s secured Jason Child, a high-ranking exec at Amazon, as its chief financial officer.

    Child held the title "Vice President of Finance" for Amazon’s international business prior to this move, and that role put him in within a department worth about $14 billion.  So Child has valuable experience with large, public companies that operate in more than one country.

    Child has lots of experience, too.  His LinkedIn profile indicates that he started doing financial work for Amazon in April of 1999, and before that, spent seven years as a consulting manager at the famous accounting firm Arthur Andersen.

    All of this could point towards Groupon wanting to go public.  An IPO would give the company a shot at growing beyond Google’s offer, at all, and Groupon couldn’t (or at least shouldn’t) have tried to go public without an industry veteran guiding the way.

    We’ll of course see what happens.

    Anyway, for the time being, Child said in a statement, "Groupon is one of the most amazing businesses I have ever seen.  I am thrilled to join a great team that is attacking one of the biggest opportunities in e-commerce today."

  • Groupon: We’re the Savior for Small Businesses

    Legend has it that Groupon turned down a $6 billion offer from Google, which if accepted would have been Google’s biggest acquisition to date. Time will tell if this was a smart move or not, but Andrew Mason, Groupon’s CEO seems fairly confident in the company’s future.

    Do you think Groupon will remain independent? Will the Internet giants be able to contend?
     Comment here.

    Mason recently appeared on Charlie Rose, who asked him about the offer. He declined to talk about it specifically, but did offer this response: "I think every choice we make in the company comes down to a core of this idea we have of what Groupon could be, and the place it could play in the world in the rest of the 21st century, and every choice that we make is which option will make it more possible for us to get there. So I think whatever we decide to do with the company – the people that we hire, the deals that we run – every itty bitty choice is how do we build this company into something that transforms the way people buy from local businesses?"

    Rose asked if the decision had been influenced by decisions Facebook had made, to which Mason responded: "I can’t talk about this Charlie. You can’t talk about all kinds of things largely because for the same reason that every person you go on a date with…you don’t bring them home to your parents right away."

    Mason said that the company, which began as nothing more than a side project is adding about 30 cities a month in 35 countries, has 40 million subscribers, and just added 3 million subscribers the previous week. 

    Can Groupon Become the Next Amazon?

    Mason said he wants Groupon to change the way people buy from local businesses like Amazon changed how they buy products, and told Rose, "The discount is this great trick that we’re playing on people because we’re tricking them into getting out of the house and live their lives, because it’s there for one day. It’s like, ‘I’ve always wanted to go skydiving. If I’m gonna do it, I might as well do it now because it’s never gonna be cheaper,’ so we finally get people to commit and get off the couch and go out and have some fun."

    Of course Amazon might wish to be that company too. The company recently invested 175 million into LivingSocial, one of Groupon’s biggest competitors. 

    LivingSocial vs Groupon  - Data from Hitwise

    The Savior for Small Businesses?

    Mason said Groupon was able to give one business half the number of customers in one day that the business had previously had in the previous 25 years combined. That’s quite a feat, and the kind of power that would make such a large price tag from Google seem pretty legit. 

    "We’re the savior for small businesses," Mason told Rose. "For consumers, we want to reverse this trend of spending more and more time on the computer, and help people rediscover their cities." He Later added, "We found a way to make the coupon cool."

    Mason is well aware of the Groupon copycats out there, but appears satisfied with the large lead it has in the market, the rate of expansion, and the company’s focus on what it does. 

    For right now, it looks like Groupon will have some pretty fierce competition from some bigger players it hasn’t really had to contend with much yet, however. Google, Facebook, and Amazon are all going to want a piece of this pie, and all have a great deal of resources and sway over consumer habits on the web itself. 2011 is going to be a most intriguing year for local business deals. 

    Watch the entire interview here. Mason’s a pretty funny guy. 

    Do you think Groupon is the savior for small businesses? Tell us what you think

  • Amazon Adds Newspapers And Magazines To Kindle For Android App

    Amazon said today that users of its Kindle for Android app can now buy, read, and sync more than 100 Kindle newspapers and magazines.

    Additional new features include the ability to buy and download Kindle books and periodicals within the Kindle for Android app, share reading progress via social networks, and zoom closer to images and other graphics. Kindle for Android is the first major e-book app to offer periodicals on the Android platform.

    Kindle-for-Android “We want to give customers the freedom and flexibility to buy their newspapers and magazines once, and read them everywhere across the devices and platforms they chose–just like they do with Kindle books today," said Russ Grandinetti, Vice President, Amazon Kindle.

    "Kindle for Android is our fastest-growing application, and we’re excited to launch over 100 newspapers and magazines for our Android customers."

    Other updates to the Kindle for Android app include the addition of an in-app store optimized for the Android interface, which allows users to find, buy, and download over 750,000 Kindle books without leaving the app, as well as social network integration, which allows users to share their progress in a book using Google’s built-in Share functionality.

  • Anonymous Wikileaks Avengers: We Don’t Want Your Credit Card Info or to Prevent You From Shopping

    "Anonymous" is an "Internet gathering" of people that has perpetrated Operation Payback, which took down MasterCard.com, Visa.com and others, because of how they’ve handled their relationships with Wikileaks, has issued a press release in attempt to clarify what it is trying to do. 

    Anonymous paints itself as non-threatening to consumers, and emphasizes that its goal is to spread Wikileaks awareness. "We do not want to steal your personal information or credit card numbers. We also do not seek to attack critical infrastructure of companies such as Mastercard, Visa, PayPal or Amazon. Our current goal is to raise awareness about WikiLeaks and the underhanded methods employed by the above companies to impair WikiLeaks’ ability to function."

    Anonymous says it did not attempt to bring Amazon down, though the company said in a statement that it successfully blocked numerous attempts (it’s possible that these were unrelated). Anonymous says, "We felt that it would affect people such as consumers in a negative way and make them feel threatened by Anonymous. Simply put, attacking a major online retailer when people are buying presents for their loved ones, would be in bad taste."

    The entire release is below:

    Anonymous issues press releaseWho is Anonymous

    In their most recent public statement, WikiLeaks is the only group of people to identify Anonymous correctly. Anonymous is not a group, but rather an Internet gathering.

    Both Anonymous and the media that is covering it  are aware of the percieved dissent  between individuals  in  the  gathering.  This  does  not,  however,  mean  that  the  command  structure  of Anonymous is failing for a simple reason: Anonymous has a very loose and decentralized command structure that operates on ideas rather than directives.

     We do not believe that a similar movement exists in the world today and as such we have to learn by trial  and error.  We are now in the process of better communicating some core values to the individual atoms that comprise Anonymous – we also want to take this opportunity to communicate a message to the media, so that the average Internet Citizen can get to know who we are and what we represent.

    Anonymous  is  not  a  group  of  hackers.  We  are  average  Interent  Citizens  ourselves  and  our motivation is a collective sense of being fed up with all the minor and major injustices we witness every day.

    We do not want to steal your personal information or credit card numbers. We also do not seek to attack critical infrastructure of companies such as Mastercard, Visa, PayPal or Amazon. Our current goal is to raise awareness about WikiLeaks and the underhanded methods employed by the above companies to impair WikiLeaks’ ability to function.

    What is Operation: Payback

    As stated above, the point of Operation: Payback was never to target critical infrastructure of any of the companies or  organizations affected.  Rather  than doing that,  we focused on their  corporate websites,  which is  to say,  their  online "public  face".  It  is  a symbolic  action –  as  blogger  and academic Evgeny Morozov put it, a legitimate expression of dissent.

    The background to the attacks on PayPal and the calls to attack Amazon.com Amazon, which was until recently WikiLeaks’ DNS provider, was one of the first companies to drop support for WikiLeaks. On December 9th, BusinessInsider.com reported that Amazon.co.uk were hosting the recently leaked diplomatic cables in e-book form. (Amazon.co.uk has since ceased selling the bundle of the diplomatic cables.)

    After this piece of news circulated, parts of Anonymous on Twitter asked for Amazon.com to betargetted. The attack never occured. While it is indeed possible that Anonymous may not have been able to take Amazon.com down in a DDoS attack, this is not the only reason the attack never occured. After the attack was so advertised in the media,  we felt that it would affect people such as consumers in a negative way and make them feel threatened by Anonymous. Simply put, attacking a major online retailer when people are buying presents for their loved ones, would be in bad taste.

    The continuing attacks on PayPal are already tested and preferable: while not damaging their ability to process payments, they are successful in slowing their network down just enough for people to notice and thus, we achieve our goal of raising awareness.

  • E-Reader Sales Set To Double This Year

    E-Reader Sales Set To Double This Year

    E-reader sales are on track to total 6.6 million units in 2010, up 79.8 percent from 2009 sales of 3.6 million units, according to a new report from Gartner.

    Hugues-De-La-Vergne In 2011, global e-reader sales are forecast to surpass 11 million units, a 68.3 percent increase from 2010.

    "The connected e-reader market has grown dramatically during the past two years, driven by sales of Amazon’s e-readers, primarily in North America. This is the dominant region for e-reader sales, and we predict that it will account for sales of just over 4 million units in 2010," said Hugues De La Vergne, principal research analyst at Gartner.

    “North America will remain a key market through 2014, although its dominance will decline significantly as regions such as Western Europe and Asia/Pacific become the leading locations for growth. Growth in North American and other markets will remain constrained by the success of media tablets, such as the Apple iPad."

    Although three vendors dominate the current e-reader market (Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Sony), new competitors may appear in the future with low-cost devices subsidized by content owners. Large consumer electronics and PC firms such as HP and Dell are also trying to position themselves in the market for connected consumer devices.

    Cannibalization by media tablets represents the biggest threat to e-readers. Media tablets can offer a compelling experience for electronic magazines and newspapers, due to their widespread adoption of displays that show color and support full-motion video. By incorporating e-reader functionality, media tablets can perform many different functions, including supporting e-reader applications.

    "With media tablets offering more functionality, e-reader vendors need to target avid readers who may see the value of a stand-alone device that performs particularly well," said Allen Weiner, research vice president at Gartner.

    "E-reader vendors will also need to offer lower prices than for more fully featured media tablets. This will entail smaller profit margins and potential hardware subsidies at retail, and/or the ability to obtain lower-priced components. We think few end users will buy both an e-reader and a media tablet, so it is important that e-readers retain a price advantage."
     

  • Amazon Offers Nielsen BookScan To Authors

    Amazon Offers Nielsen BookScan To Authors

    Amazon.com said today that authors who use its Author Central service can now view Nielsen BookScan’s weekly geographic sales data for their print books for free.

    Author Central is a free service that helps authors promote their books and reach more readers. Also announced today, Author Central has added a feature that shows authors past history on the Amazon bestsellers rank for their books.

    Amazon-Nielsen-BookScan

    “Authors are an important community for us,” said Russ Grandinetti, Vice President, Amazon. “We’re really happy to make it easy and free for them to see geographical BookScan data updated weekly, as well as historical Amazon bestsellers rank, for their books.”

    “We hope this creates an improved feedback loop for authors and enables them to develop more effective methods for reaching the widest possible audience.”

    The new “Sales by Geography” feature displays a map of the continental United States, highlighting the areas where copies of authors’ books have been sold. The new “Sales by Week” feature displays a bar chart of an author’s sales recorded over the trailing four weeks. Authors can also see how many copies of each title were sold by print-edition type, e.g. hardcover or paperback. Digital book sales are not included in BookScan data.

     

  • Amazon UK Listing Wikileaks Cables for Sale on Kindle

    Update: See comments section.

    The Next Web discovered that someone is selling the infamous Wikileaks cables at Amazon UK to be read on the Kindle. This is interesting for a variety of reasons. 

    Reason 1 

    Amazon Web Services recently stopped hosting the cables, claiming Wikieaks was violating its terms of service. A statement from the company said:

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) rents computer infrastructure on a self-service basis. AWS does not pre-screen its customers, but it does have terms of service that must be followed. WikiLeaks was not following them. There were several parts they were violating. For example, our terms of service state that “you represent and warrant that you own or otherwise control all of the rights to the content… that use of the content you supply does not violate this policy and will not cause injury to any person or entity.” It’s clear that WikiLeaks doesn’t own or otherwise control all the rights to this classified content. Further, it is not credible that the extraordinary volume of 250,000 classified documents that WikiLeaks is publishing could have been carefully redacted in such a way as to ensure that they weren’t putting innocent people in jeopardy. Human rights organizations have in fact written to WikiLeaks asking them to exercise caution and not release the names or identities of human rights defenders who might be persecuted by their governments.

    Reason 2

    Amazon is the latest target of Operation Payback, the hacker group that took down MasterCard.com and Visa.com, according to numerous reports. In that same statement, Amazon had already said, "There were indeed large-scale DDOS attacks, but they were successfully defended against."

    So far, Amazon.com is still up and running. 

    Reason 3

    Both the user who is selling the cables at Amazon UK and Amazon itself would theoretically make money from the sale of what was originally free public data. 

    Wikileaks Cables on Amazon UK

    Reason 4

    Amazon has recently been the subject of another publication controversy involving the sale of a pedophile guidebook. Many are already pointing out that this is the second big blunder from the company involving self-publishing, and some are questioning whether Amazon will have to rethink its strategy in this area.

    Reason 5

    Amazon has yet to terminate the Wikileaks cables listing. it’s currently on sale for £7.37. It will most likely be pulled as the story gains more media coverage, but for now, it’s still up. 

    In the product description on Amazon UK, it says, "The Author will analyze the documents more thoroughly in a subsequent article."

    One reviewer says, "Hm, would Amazon let me buy this using my PayPal account? What about my Visa or Mastercard?"  

  • Scammers Targeting Amazon Retailers With Fake Receipts

    Cyber criminals are using a hacking program to create fake receipts for items sold through Amazon.com and its retail partners, in an effort to receive refunds or new products, according to security firm GFI Software.

    “The free program available online allows scammers to create an HTML ‘receipt’ for phantom Amazon.com purchases,” said Christopher Boyd, senior threat researcher, GFI Software

     

    Amazon-Scam

     

    “By capturing a screenshot of the fake receipt, these cyber criminals are able to email unsuspecting sellers claiming they are missing items. This type of fraud, perpetrated en masse, could result in massive losses for retailers, especially during the holiday shopping season.”

    GFI says there are some indications that a receipt is fake. The merchant will not have a record of the purchase, but Amazon should be able to confirm that no purchase was ever made. Merchants should check the orange order number at the top of the receipt because those are randomly selected from a set of looping numbers every time the scammer clicks on the “Order Number” button. The seller or Amazon should be able to verify whether it is a valid order number. Finally, the program seems to add random digits on the “Visa: payment method” section in payment information, which warrants further investigation.

    “Many of the items in the fake printout are convincing as a whole, but once you start digging into the details a little bit, it quickly falls apart. If a ‘customer’ seems a little peculiar, ensure you take a good look at their receipt,” warned Boyd.

     

  • Amazon Set To Expand Kindle For The Web

    Amazon.com has expanded its  Kindle for the Web to allow anyone with access to a browser to buy and read Kindle books.

     Retailers, authors, bloggers and website owners will be able to offer Kindle books from their own sites and earn referral fees through the Amazon Associates Program for sales made through their site. Amazon said its expanded Kindle for the Web will be available in the coming months.

    Website owners can embed the Kindle for the Web widget and start offering books. The update to Kindle for the Web was demonstrated at a Google Chrome event and will support Chrome OS devices, including the new Chrome OS Notebook, as well as the Chrome browser and other web browsers.

     

    Kindle-for-the-Web

     

    “Kindle for the Web makes it possible for bookstores, authors, retailers, bloggers or other website owners to offer Kindle books on their websites and earn affiliate fees for doing so," said Russ Grandinetti, Vice President, Kindle Content.

    "Anyone with access to a web browser can discover the seamless and consistent experience that comes with Kindle books.”

    Kindle for the Web joins Amazon’s other free reading apps for iPad, iPod touch, iPhone, Mac, PC, BlackBerry and Android-based devices that let users read and sync their reading library, bookmarks, notes, and highlights with the device or platform of their choice.

     

  • Groupon Dominates LivingSocial In Market Share, But Now Amazon’s In The Equation

    Update:  Groupon has reportedly rejected Google’s offer.

    There’s a reason why Google is going after Groupon as opposed to one of its competitors. Not only is it the leader in its space, it’s the leader in its space by a long shot.  Experian Hitwise has shared some data comparing market share of visits of Group Coupon Sites, and Groupon is way ahead of its closest competitor, LivingSocial.

    LivingSocial vs Groupon  - Data from Hitwise

    A Google acquisition could make Groupon’s market share skyrocket even more, though LivingSocial just got a nice infusion of cash from the biggest retailer on the web. LivingSocial announced a $175 Million Investment by Amazon, as well as an additional $8 million investment from Lightspeed Venture Partners. 

    The company says it will use the investment to maintain a "steady drumbeat of worldwide launches and overall business growth". LivingSocial already has over 10 million subscribers in the US, Canada, UK, Ireland, and Australia. 

    "To be the biggest player in the local commerce space there is no one better to work with than Amazon," said LivingSocial CEO Tim O’Shaughnessy. "As the social shopping space continues to heat up, LivingSocial is committed to staying focused on providing the high level of quality that consumers and merchants have come to expect when working with us."

    Along with the above chart,  Experian Hitwise shared the following information:

    – Groupon.com received 79% of US visits last week and Living Social received 8% among a custom category of 81 Group Buying sites last week

    – First, (the site) appeared in Spring of this year, that Living Social’s visit growth would make it a viable threat to Groupon. As the chart denotes, that growth-spurt was very short lived.

    – Second, if we look at the graph’s end-point, Living Social’s market-share is almost an order of magnitude lower than Groupon’s.

    – So one-tenth of $6 billion dollars (Groupon’s valuation) is less than Living Social’s projected valuation. Of course traffic to valuation is a gross over-simplification. Perhaps Living Social’s audience composition would validate a higher value.

    – The main difference between the two audiences, is that Groupon has clearly "crossed the chasm" in Geoffrey Moore speak, with strong showings in types like Mosaic type C02 – Prime Middle America. Probably the most interesting difference is the percentage of Young Cosmopolitans – type H01 that are frequenting LivingSocial.

    – From prior analysis we know that Young Cosmos are one [of] the strongest early adopter segments. Despite the very unimpressive traffic numbers, perhaps Amazon is recognizing the potential for LivingSocial to move beyond its current early adopter phase.

    Both Groupon and LivingSocial will have plenty of competition to deal with moving forward as this space is getting incredibly hot. If Google buys Groupon, it will have a clear advantage over the rest, however (even more so than it already does), with Google’s new overall focus on local and social. Amazon is very powerful though, so that should be huge for LivingSocial.

     

  • Black Friday Online Sales Reach $648 Million

    Black Friday Online Sales Reach $648 Million

    Black Friday saw $648 million in online sales, making it the heaviest online spending day to date in 2010 and representing a 9 percent increase over Black Friday 2009, according to the latest report from comScore.

    U.S. ecommerce spending for the first 26 days of the November-December 2010 holiday season reached $11.64 billion, marking a 13 percent increase over the same period last year. Thanksgiving Day (November 26) saw online holiday spending up 28 percent to $407 million.

     

    Black-Friday-2010

     

    “Although Black Friday is known for the flurry of activity occurring in brick-and-mortar retail stores, online shopping is increasingly becoming the refuge of those preferring to avoid the crowds and long lines,” said comScore chairman, Gian Fulgoni.

    “The $648 million in online spending this Black Friday represents the heaviest online spending day of the season-to-date and a solid increase over last year’s Black Friday. Interestingly, we are also seeing consumers beginning to buy online in a more meaningful way on Thanksgiving Day, which has historically seen low buying activity.”

    As the online channel becomes more influential in driving offline shopping behavior, consumers are turning to Black Friday sites on the Internet to do research in advance of the day’s events. comScore analyzed eight Black Friday deal sites for the five days ending Black Friday (Nov. 22-26) compared to the corresponding days last year, finding that Black-Friday.net led the pack with 3.1 million unique visitors, up 42 percent versus last year. BlackFriday.info followed with 2.7 million visitors, while Black-Friday2010.com (up 478 percent to 1.5 million visitors) showed the greatest growth.

    Other highlights about Black Friday bargain hunting include:

    *The number of visitors to coupon sites on Black Friday grew 4 percent versus year ago to 3.6 million visitors, while the total number of visits to the category increased 16 percent to 7.4 million.

    *BlackFriday.info was the most visited coupon site on Black Friday with 630,000 unique visitors, followed by CouponCabin.com (543,000), RetailMeNot.com (332,000 visitors) and Groupon.com (332,000).

    *ShopLocal.com ranked as the most visited comparison shopping site on Black Friday with 2.1 million visitors, up 45 percent versus year ago.

    Four retail properties surpassed four million U.S. unique visitors on Black Friday, with mixed results in comparison to last year. Amazon Sites was the most visited retail property on Black Friday, growing 25 percent from the corresponding shopping day a year ago, followed by Walmart, which saw a marginal decline of 1 percent. Target Corporation (up 9 percent) and Best Buy Sites (up 1 percent) rounded out the top four.

    “Amazon, with a sizeable increase in traffic on Black Friday, continues to experience remarkable success during the holiday season,” added Mr. Fulgoni.

    “We will be watching closely to see if the leading online retailer is able to sustain this momentum through Cyber Monday and into the heart of the online shopping season.”

     

  • Amazon Launches Price Check App For iPhone

    Amazon.com has introduced a new free price comparison app for iPhone that lets people compare in-store prices with prices from Amazon and other online retailers.

    The app called “Price Check,” allows iPhone users to scan a barcode, take a picture, or say or type a product name to receive prices for an item from Amazon and other online retailers.

    “This app makes it incredibly easy to quickly compare prices on millions of items before making a purchase,” said Sam Hall, director of Amazon Mobile.

     

    Price-Check

     

    “We’ve worked hard to have low prices at Amazon, and we like it when customers comparison shop so they know they’re getting a good deal. We hope this app will empower customers to shop with confidence this holiday and any other day.”

     Price Check users have four ways to find prices:

    *Scan a barcode: Amazon’s barcode scanner will match an item and provide pricing from Amazon.com and other online merchants.

    *Snap a picture: Snap a photo and match the picture to books, DVDs, CDs and video games.

    *Say the product name: Speak the name of a product to return product matches and pricing.

    *Type your search: Type the product name to retrieve matches.

     You can also get more information on the app here.