Amazon introduces ad-subsidized Kindle

Amazon has widened the price gap between its Kindle e-reader and the iPad even further by subsidizing the entry-level model with advertising, dubbing it Kindle with Special Offers. If you subject yourself to ads on the device you can nab a Kindle for $25 off, bringing the price down to $114. I’d bite at this maybe if it were well under $100, or certainly if it were free, but only $25 off? No thanks.

When you buy Kindle with Special Offers, you are getting the same bestselling Kindle for $25 less—only $114. Special offers and sponsored screensavers display on the Kindle screensaver and on the bottom of the home screen—they don’t interrupt reading.

Amazon certainly has an interesting idea though. They are effectively selling an Amazon ‘shopping tablet’ with offers such as $1 MP3 albums or 6 Audible books for $6. So you’re just a click away from the world’s largest store should the urge to shop arise during Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. This just demonstrates how the tablet market is heating up, with everyone jumping in.

What do you think? How about a subsidized iPad with 3G? Will we ever see that business model from US wireless carriers?

[via Los Angeles Times]

James Britton

James first bit into Apple when his mom and dad bought an Apple IIe in 1986. He switched to Wintel in the mid 90s when Apple was in a tailspin and back again to an iBook in 2005 when things were looking brighter. Hopefully there is no turning back to the dark side now.