So far I've seen a few comments criticizing Mayday, because of claims that "it should just work, like Apple". In fact, Apple offers free "setup" service at an Apple Store when you buy your device, and 90 days of unlimited phone support once you leave the store[1]. Plus the free Genius Bar appointments, even after you're well out of your warranty period.
Mayday is really fascinating, because it seems like Amazon's attempt to adapt the Genius Bar to their business model. You can argue that having enough tech support people to cover the feature might get expensive, but I could see it having a 'ring-back' notification, where you ask for help, and then your tablet will notify you when a support person is ready. Compared to the cost of having a bunch of flagship retail stores (staffed by a bunch of greater than minimum wage "Geniuses", governed by whatever local labour laws apply), I guess we'll have to wait and see which approach proves more cost effective.
Of course it should have a ring-back feature. Not only is it a good idea for reducing customer wait times and frustrations, it is a feature Amazon already implemented several years ago for their regular customer service.
Around 2010 I placed an order and quickly realized I had made some stupid mistake--I think I had left some of my items in the wish list or so. I clicked through the support option on Amazon.com and it asked me for my phone number. I entered it, and the site gave me some clue about how long I'd wait (only a few minutes). Before long, the phone rang, and the person on the other end immediately resolved my issue, corrected it with a level of calm reassurance I hadn't experienced since something with LSI RAID support in 2007 (a higher-margin business with real critical stuff on the line, not my BS shopping cart mishap!).
Before that little episode (which lasted all of ten minutes), I liked Amazon. Afterward, I rarely considered buying elsewhere.
Agreed -- I had a similar experience with my wife's original Kindle Fire. I got a prompt callback from someone who knew what they were talking about (not just someone obviously walking through a script and telling me to do things I already said I had done). When it turned out to be a problem with the device, they made it stupidly easy to replace the device.
I'd much rather deal with good phone support with little hassle than have to trek to a mall to get to a store where I can talk to an expert. Sure the face-to-face support is probably more comforting to some, but many people in that camp probably wouldn't feel comfortable buying such a device online to begin with.
I think the video chat component of this is to assuage the 'face-to-face support is more comforting' crowd. If my mum can get the callback, see the person, talk to them, and have the steps explained, it'll vastly reduce the number of service calls I get ;)
I'm confused about the mayday feature - is it free, and is it included on the $139 device? I can easily see my parents burning through $139 in tech support over a single weekend, just to get things setup. I can also see lonely people calling just to see someone and talk, and presenting fake issues that they need help with. Finally, I can see mayday leading to the sort of technological illiteracy that you see in a household when one person is responsible for all IT support - the other person winds up barely able to log into their own accounts because someone else always solves their problems for them.
My guess would be that Amazon are counting on them then buying movies, apps and books to make up for it.
This feels like a response to poor user engagement and given that on-going purchases are a big part of Amazon's aim for these devices that would be a problem for them.
Remember too that this could / should be a one off cost to Amazon for each Fire user. When / if your parents like the tablet and upgrade in the future, you'd hope that they then had enough familiarity not to need it again.
I dunno - my parents would never stop using such a service - it's easier than googling your problem, and they find new tech problems on a weekly basis, and they aren't great at pattern matching to solve those new problems. God help them if the device auto updates into software that looks any different....
I agree that it's a response to poor engagement, but if that's the case, I think they're trying to solve a usability problem by throwing people at it. Apple's biggest selling point for the last 4 years was "It doesn't come with a manual because it's so simple". Amazon seems to have given up on simple, and on manuals - their equivalent phrase would be "it's so complex that we've hired people to help you use it, 24/7".
I think that although this service is a small step forward for currently confused users, it's likely a huge leap backwards, because it'll leave those people confused forever, and dependent on the "amazon lady" to use their tablet for them. On the surface, this seems too ridiculously obvious, so I have to imagine that they've got an awesome game plan that is yet to be revealed.
Thinking about it a little more, Bezos has said that the Amazon process overall is about massive scale and when you're dealing with massive scale you remove every minor pain point because at massive scale even small pain multiples up to have a significant hit.
Thinking about it with that in mind, this could be Amazon using Mayday as a way of learning where people have pain so they can remove it in future versions.
Perhaps it should be seen as the largest usability study in history?
It seems to me that Amazon is solving new issues this way. Their online ordering process is still the simplest around (especially once you set up one-click - although that leads to my situation of frequent unexpected Amazon packages from impulse buys).
A talent for writing comments that read like brazen astroturfing? The first time I read it, that's what I thought it was. I'm still not sure that it isn't.
Is it just me or does the announcement time seem strangely late at night? Wouldn't a company normally announce something like this during business hours, assuming a US target market?
Midnight embargoes are common, I deal with them all the time. Problem is sometimes the PR people just say "12 midnight on Tuesday," with no indication of whether that means at the very first second of tuesday or the very last one. I know there are commonplace understandings on this score, but not everyone is on the same page.
Occasionally to be extra clear they'll set the embargo for 12:01 AM or what have you. It makes more sense to have it be at 7AM New York time, but no one listens to me.
Product line is too confusing as per kindle, seems a bit contrived. For example 8.9 version retina-like display resolution yearns to be model "hey we can do iPad too".
I can see these things being sold at Walmarts/K-marts etc to family dads that often go out of town by car on frequent business trips. I'd totally replace pay per view with this thing.
Material quality looks sketchy too. That garish reflective plastic at the back at the top of the beveled edge. I think the design looked very cool on paper...
I love my kindle paperwhite, ipad and iphone5.
Kindle fire can be another device I can toss into my backpack when travelling but I am already thinking of replacing my iPad with iPad mini and get rid of to reduce overall travel weight.
8.9 version retina-like display resolution yearns to be model "hey we can do iPad too"
Yeah! It sure is annoying when everybody realizes high-res screens are good, and put them in lots of different devices! I hate it when that happens, don't you?
I've found that now I have a big phone (or small tablet) I don't use my kindle. You can cover the range with something like that (what I really want is a 6" phone/tablet, but it seems no-one's making those, so the choice is either a 5" big phone or a 7" tablet-that-makes-phone-calls like that ASUS thing) and a light 11" "ultrabook", which means one or two fewer devices to lug around.
Its some law of product ecosystems - a device will pop up to fill every niche across the range, at $50 intervals. Not a bad thing; you just have to pick and choose to tile together a set that works for you.
What I have now is a Note II; I think of it as 5" - as a European I don't really have an instinct for inches, so maybe it's "really 6"". But either way it feels like there's a big size gap between something like this and then the nexus 7/asus fonepad/etc., where really I want something that's halfway between those.
Does anyone know what Android release Fire OS 3.0 is based off of?
The angular back looks stark and painful, though I like the recessed camera.
The casting feature is a bit lost - me and most of my friends don't have PS3s (some have Wii's others 360s, one has a PS3). Plus, if you have a PS3, doesn't it already come with Amazon Video?
What's with the dig about "owning the living room" at the end? Amazon is doing great with their tablet line, features like PlayTime and others look really cool to an iOS family like mine. Why does everything have to "dominate" in order to be a good product?
> does it also run all Android apps that 4.2.2 runs?
This very much depends on your definition of Android. If you have used any Google Play Services (or any Google-backed APIs within Android itself, prior to migration to Play Services) you will need to switch them over to Amazon's equivalents (where they exist).
Since Google is heavily pushing Play Services to developers, chances are many apps will need to have some changes made to them to enable Kindle Fire support.
Not that surprising, really. Ever since the new Nexus 7 was introduced, the Kindle Fire has looked weak. This, at least, brings the Fire on par with the 2013 N7.
The real surprise, though, is the dog that didn't bark. Where's Apple in all this? The iPad Mini is still basically a shrunk down iPad 2. Do they still think that the 7" tablet market isn't worth pursuing wholeheartedly?
So the August 2013 Nexus 7 has a quad core 1.5g Snapdragon S4 Pro but the October 2013 Kindle HDX 7 has a quad core 2.2g Snapdragon 800. I'm not up to snuff on mobile processors but, according to what I'm seeing on the web, it seems there's no real difference other than clock speed going on here [0]. What else is going on in the Nexus 7 that makes it a "good buy" relative to the Kindle HDX models now? Other than "I have already bought a lot of Android apps so I don't want to switch", what's the compelling reason to buy a Nexus tablet now?
This was just my experience, but after using stock Android on a phone and a tablet for about a year, I found the Kindle Fire HD basically unusable when I tried it out. I couldn't get it to do anything I wanted. It felt like a thoroughly crippled OS to me. You can only use Amazon's tiny app store (you can get around this but it's not very secure).
And as other commenters have pointed out, the Nexus 7 seems thinner too.
I earn about 25% as much in Amazon vs. Google Play. Still a decent chunk. I think these tablets are being marketed well by Amazon and not all consumers even understand this fact, so if you have a good showing in the Amazon Appstore it can be successful.
In addition, the Nook Store from B&N earns about 25% of what Amazon earns.
The smaller one doesn't look to compare too well to the Nexus 7 - it costs the same, is marginally heavier and has ads. I guess if you need a lot of support to use a tablet...?
The big 8.9" model, on the other hand, is impressive - .84 pounds is extremely light for a screen of that size and resolution. I'm almost skeptical that they're claiming 12 hour battery life on top of that. Did they achieve some kind of battery breakthrough?
Is there a good place to showroom these things? I'm very close to getting an iPad (we'll see what the new one looks like), since my 1st gen Kindle Fire is dying and I've already ordered the new Paperwhite (my dad has one, and it really seems like they have perfected that device for its limited purpose). This model looks pretty intriguing though.
Does anybody know if the new Kindle 7" or the new Nexus 7 are ok for reading books with diagrams/images (i.e. IT manuals)?
I tried quickly my bro's Samsung Galaxy Tab 10" and even though it's 10" I think the resolution is not enough to have a full page readable on the screen..
Wish they would, I started using AIV to get new shows without downloading. Partly since usenet indexing was sketchy for a while, but it's also convenient and cheap, and since I'm in the states now I can actually get content.
Very glad these are finally out. Not sure I can justify to myself getting the 8.9 (have a nexus), but maybe a 7". I really do love the screen on the 8.9 though.
Looking at the price of a tablet of camera, amazing processor, good storage, HD display I wonder how pricey is the e-ink technology, some Kindle Readers are more expensive than their tablet brothers.
Mayday is really fascinating, because it seems like Amazon's attempt to adapt the Genius Bar to their business model. You can argue that having enough tech support people to cover the feature might get expensive, but I could see it having a 'ring-back' notification, where you ask for help, and then your tablet will notify you when a support person is ready. Compared to the cost of having a bunch of flagship retail stores (staffed by a bunch of greater than minimum wage "Geniuses", governed by whatever local labour laws apply), I guess we'll have to wait and see which approach proves more cost effective.
1. http://www.apple.com/retail/personalsetup/