"Today, we're going to show you the third leg of our device business  strategy," Jeff Bezos begins. His audience is modest: four people  sitting around a table in an Amazon conference room. It's a far cry from  the Santa Monica airplane hangar his company rented out for last year's  event. Bezos picks up a dry erase marker and begins breaking down the  first two parts, elements the company has focused on since it first  began building Kindles. "One," he says, narrating the words as he goes  along, like an enthusiastic high school teacher, "premium products at  non-premium prices. Two: make money when people use our devices, not  when they buy our devices."
"We sell our hardware and roughly break even and then when they use  the devices and buy content," he adds. "Our point of view is that this  is more aligned with the customer. We don't have to get discouraged when  we see people using fourth-generation Kindles. Bezos draws a Venn  diagram to illustrate the third part of the puzzle. He writes "customer  delight" on one side and "deep integration throughout the entire stack"  on the other. The intersection houses the "hardest" and "coolest  things," which utilize OS, key apps, the hardware stack and the cloud.  "It's a little abstract," he adds, "but I think it will be extremely  clear when I show it to you." The template for the third piece of the  puzzle is the new Kindle Fire HDX series -- the company's latest premium  tablets.
Original.. http://www.engadget.com/2013/09/25/amazon-debuts-kindle-fire-hdx-7-and-8-9-inch-tablets-we-go-han/ 
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