Tag Archives: OMAP

Amazon.com's Race to the Bottom

By Evan Niu, CFA, The Motley Fool

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Always one to go low, Amazon.com may be about to go even lower with its popular Kindle Fire tablet. TechCrunch is reporting that the e-tail juggernaut is preparing to launch a $99 Kindle Fire with a seven-inch display.

Amazon is reportedly going with a 1280 x 800 resolution along with a processor from Texas Instruments . If those specs sound familiar, that’s because the current $199 Kindle Fire HD bears the same characteristics. The company continues to put pressure on Apple‘s iPad mini, and also recently dropped the price of its 8.9-inch Kindle Fire HD, which is now $60 cheaper than Apple’s smaller model. A possible $99 model could potentially add even more heat, costing less than a third of an entry-level iPad mini.

Here, have some cost savings
When Amazon reduced the price of its bigger tablet, the company said that it was passing along cost savings that have materialized since the initial launch as Amazon increased production volumes. The possibility of a $99 Kindle Fire would follow in those same footsteps, and also implies that costs have come down significantly since launch.

In November, IHS iSuppli estimated that Amazon’s component costs including manufacturing totaled $174, so costs must have had to come down significantly for Amazon to make this move. The largest component for any tablet in general is always the display and touchscreen assembly ($64 of iSuppli’s November estimate). That was five months ago, and any cost reductions related to the display would go a long way in facilitating a retail price drop.

Going with TI would show how cozy the pair is, since TI publicly exited the mobile chip sector last year. TI processors have powered every Kindle Fire to date, and Amazon is undoubtedly the biggest buyer of its OMAP chips.

IDC Research Director Tom Mainelli said the $99 price point seems within reach for Amazon, since the company does have the required scale to make it worthwhile.

Stuck in the middle with you
With Google‘s upcoming second-generation Nexus 7 expected within a matter of months, a $99 Kindle Fire would also be a viable threat to the search giant if it were still targeting the original $199 price point. Google similarly pursues a strategy of little to no hardware margins for most of its devices (other than its new high-end Chromebook Pixel), so the company can also be expected to pass along cost savings to consumers wherever possible.

Although Google has also been following Apple’s lead with pushing higher-resolution displays, such as the one found in the larger Nexus 10 and the aforementioned Chromebook Pixel. If the search giant opts for a sharper display in the second-generation Nexus 7, that’s going to add a lot to the bill of materials and may prohibit a more aggressive price point. On the other hand, a higher-resolution Nexus 7 would also be positioned higher than a $99 tablet.

There aren’t a whole lot of rumors …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Viewsonic puts Nvidia inside

LAS VEGAS—PC displays are rarely sexy, but Viewsonic showed off several decidedly cool displays on the CES show floor Tuesday.

One of the more intriguing monitors is their new VSD240 smart display. Whether it’s a “smart display” or an Android Jelly  Bean-powered All-in-One PC is arguable, since the Tegra 3 processor offers pretty robust CPU and graphics performance in its own right. You can just run the VSD240 as an Android-based computer or connect it to a Windows based PC. This isn’t Viewsonic’s first smart display, but it’s the first to use Tegra 3. Earlier models used TI’s OMAP 4 processor.

You can just run the VSD240 as an Android-based computer or connect it to a Windows based PC.

The VSD240 is also a capable 1080p monitor when connected to a PC. As you’d expect from a computer, the monitor includes USB ports, SD card slots, an Ethernet jack and support for 802.11n Wi-fi. If you connect the display to a Windows 8 system, you have limited touch capability—mostly basic swipes and UI gestures since the VSD240 only supports 2-point touch, rather than the 10-point touch required to be fully Windows 8 certified.

The VSD240 will be shipping in April, with a suggested retail price of $499.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld