Kindle Fire now accounts for more than half of U.S. Android tablets

26.04.2012
When people refer to "Android tablets" they may soon just be referring to the Amazon Kindle Fire.

According to the latest data released by comScore today, the Kindle Fire captured a 54.4% market share among Android tablets sold in the U.S. in February, up from a 41.8% market share in January. The only other Android tablet to even crack a 10% market share was the Samsung Galaxy Tab line of tablets, which accounted for 15.4% of all Android tablets in February. Rounding out the top five were the Motorola Xoom (7%), the Asus Transformer (6.3%) and the Toshiba AT100 (5.7%).

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The Kindle Fire has proven to be one of the few success stories for Android tablets, as it sold an e in the fourth quarter of 2011. While this is impressive as far as Android tablets go, the Kindle Fire's sales still paled in comparison with the iPad, which sold around 15 million units in the fourth quarter of 2011. Even so, market intelligence firm iSuppli said earlier this year that low-cost tablets such as the Kindle Fire and the Barnes & Noble Nook have knocked down Apple's total share of the tablet market to 57.6% in the fourth quarter of 2012 from 64% in the third quarter of 2012.

Amazon's Kindle Fire tablet was hyped as the first tablet to give the iPad a run for its money when it was released last year because of its lower $200 price tag, its integration with Amazon's cloud services and its unique Android interface designed by Amazon. Amazon created a Web browser called Amazon Silk that utilizes Amazon's cloud capabilities to speed up page load times by tracking your Web browsing patterns and preloading pages you typically visit through Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). In other words, Amazon's cloud requests your frequently visited pages before you even ask for them so they're ready to go.