Will Kindle Fire burn up the iPad? Video

To play this video, you need Javascript enabled and the latest version of Flash installed. Install Flash now
Will Kindle Fire burn up the iPad?
Created: 09/29/2011
Video description: Amazon is en fuego with its amazing new Kindle lineup, and Molly thinks Apple should take a hint and make a cheaper iPhone 5!

Will Kindle Fire burn up the iPad? Video Transcript

Hey, everyone, I�m Molly Wood, and welcome to the Buzz Report, the show about the tech news that everyone is talking about. This week, Amazon is en fuego with the new Kindle lineup, iPhone 5 is oh so close, and Facebook is just creepy and annoying like an ex who won�t go away. On Facebook. But let�s begin with the Gadget of the Week. The Gadget of the Week is the Amazon Kindle Fire! Amazon finally announced its long- awaited tablet this week and at first blush, I gotta tell you � it seems like i delivers. The Fire is a 7-inch tablet running an Amazon style of Android. It�s got Amazon�s big content library behind it, a dual-core processor to handle video and music streaming, a pretty nice-looking multi-touch IPS display, Whispersync, free Amazon Cloud storage and integration, and a whole new Amazon browser called Silk that they say is SUPER fast because it does half its work in the cloud. Oh, oh, I�m sorry � am I burying the lead? It costs one hundred and ninety nine dollars. Yeah, for real. Shipping November 15. So, this holiday season, when your friends and family and spouses are looking at you with tears in their eyes, begging for streaming video, Facebook on a tablet, and Angry Birds, the answer is just 200 dollars away. I�m just saying. Look out, Apple. On to the news � which is MORE Amazon news! As if the Fire wasn�t enough, Amazon ALSO announced three new regular old e-ink Kindle readers this week. There�s the new top of the line, a touch screen Kindle with 3G, for an ad-subsidized price of 149 bucks. Then a WiFi touchscreen Kindle for 99 bucks, with ads. And a new basic Kindle with NO touchscreen that will cost just 79 dollars, with ads -- which by the way, only show up when your Kindle is asleep. So, yeah. Amazon? Had a pretty freakin� good week. I�m expecting a good holiday season for them, too. Uh huh. We�ll see if we�re still talking Amazon this time NEXT week � we finally have a date for Apple�s big iPhone event. Tuesday, October 4th, all the months of speculation about the iPhone 5 will end for a few weeks, until we start speculating about iPhone 6 will begin. It�s a new American tradition. Rumors suggest a new design with a sleeker shape more like the iPod Touch. Possibly speech to text, faster processor, 8 megapixel camera, possibly a world phone � and � just POSSIBLY, TWO iPhone models. A regular iPhone 5 and a cheaper model that�s aimed at maybe developing countries or pre-paid users. After the happy reception for all those cheap Kindles, if I were Apple, I�d be supergluing some gorilla glass to a couple of gum sticks and showing off the iPhone Lite prototype shipping sometime �next quarter.� Pocketbooks ain�t what they used to be. CNET, of course, will be live with in-depth coverage, so stay tuned. In quick updates this week, Microsoft released the Windows Phone 7.5 Mango OS update this week, with its 500 tweaks and changes. Go check that one out this week, before iPhone 5 gets announced and ruins it for you. It�s actually pretty cool. Also, is Facebook jumping the shark? Spotify users are furious that the music service now REQUIRES a Facebook account before you can sign up, and it�s nagging current users to cozy up to Facebook so Spotify can post updates in the ticker that show every. single. song. you or your friends are listening to. And that�s just the beginning -- imagine what it will be like when every movie, TV show, book, and Web article is showing up there too, along with privacy-invading comments, likes, and photo tags from people who aren�t even your friends! God, I hate the ticker. Also, Facebook admitted this week that a �bug� was causing its cookies to continue to track your Web activity as you browse, even if you�re logged out of Facebook. I love that they�ll cop to like, every other privacy invasion on earth, but they say the cookie thing is a bug. That is not a bug. Come ON. Ok, speaking of Facebook, let�s have a look at what�s clogging the tubes. Now, when Mark Zuckerberg tried to sell us on the new Timeline Facebook profile, it sounded weird, confusing, and a little creepy. But then Eric Leist mashed up the Facebook Timeline concept with a scene from Mad Men and has Don Draper selling it to us instead, take a look. Oh, Don Draper, so dreamy, so smart, so � sad. (sigh) yes, I�m sold, Timeline me Facebook. Do that thing with the cookies, too, I don�t care. And that�s the Buzz Report for this week, everyone. I�m Molly Wood and thanks for watching.

Related Videos

Unboxing the Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 tablet

How does Amazon's Kindle Fire 8.9 tablet stack up against Google's Nexus 10 and Apple's iPad? Molly Wood unboxes the new tablet and offers her first take.

Amazon's new Kindle Fire

The next Apple iPhone gets an announcement date on next Tuesday, October 4th, Amazon announces new low-priced Kindle e-readers that also include touch-capable models, plus Amazon changes the tablet game with their $199 Kindle Fire with color touchscreen.

Amazon to update Kindle Fire software

HP open sources WebOS as the fire sale on the TouchPad burns out in minutes; Apple announces that 100 million apps have been downloaded from the Mac App Store; and Amazon promises a software update to the Kindle Fire to alleviate some of the user interface issues.

Cheaper Kindle? No, thank you!

Why Molly doesn't want a cheaper Kindle, why the Winklevii should just get over it, already, and why a smart phone trying to be a tablet is just a little too cute.

OnLive comes to iOS, Android

Streaming game service OnLive is coming to iPad, iPhone, Android tablets, and even the Kindle Fire.

Episode 14: iPhone vs. HTC One X in midair

The iPhone 5 ships this week; Molly unboxes the Kindle Fire HD; Torture testing the original Kindle; and a Road Test of the iPhone and HTC One X from 10,000 feet in the air!

Amazon's Kindle Fire has content, price to compete

Every time a new tablet computer hits the market, experts speculate whether it could be the one to take down Apple's iPad. CNET's Kara Tsuboi explains why Amazon's Kindle Fire could be its stiffest competition yet.

Amazon lights a new Fire under iPad

Amazon targets the iPad with new Kindle Fire HD, the next e-ink readers are glowing, and Motorola grows the Droid Razr family.

Amazon unveils Kindle Fire, new e-readers

At a press announcement in New York, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos unveiled a new color tablet called the Kindle Fire for $199, in addition to a refresh of their e-reader lineup.

Battle for speed supremacy: Kindle Fire vs. iPad 2

The Amazon Kindle Fire and Apple iPad 2 face off in a speed battle for the ages.