60°

Amazon Fire: 5 Things Missing

Amazon left out some important features in its splashy new Fire smartphone. Consider these five factors before you shop.

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informationweek.com
20°

In defense of the Amazon Fire Phone

The Fire Phone is widely regarded as one of Amazon’s biggest misfires — and rightfully so. After debuting in the top spot of the company’s retail..

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techcrunch.com
270°

Amazon Has Finally Given Up On The Fire Phone

In January 2015, Amazon Fire phone earned our top spot for the being the biggest tech flop of 2014.

proudly_X3322d ago

long over due. Finally, we can have some fresh air.

Aldous_Snow3320d ago

As terrible as it was... you are making such claims because they have ran out of stock? Lol

Just another example of people making up their own news stories.

proudly_X3320d ago

Lol.. run out of stock from what was never bought.. nice try buddy..

Aldous_Snow3320d ago (Edited 3320d ago )

So now you're claiming Amazon never sold a single Fire Phone? Nice try... Keep moving those goalposts.

proudly_X3320d ago

Everyone knows the Fire phone was a flop. If Amazon should suddenly go out of stock of it's product that has been collecting dust in store shelves, it does raises an eye brown..

jronj3320d ago

They ran out of stock because they have been practically giving them away over the last few months.

50°

Amazon reportedly lays off staff and scales back hardware development in wake of Fire Phone flop

techSpot: Amazon has laid off “dozens of engineers” from its Lab126 hardware unit as a result of the Amazon Fire Phone’s failure, according to reports from The Wall Street Journal.

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techspot.com
Stringerbell3333d ago (Edited 3333d ago )

I completely forget about this (go figure). It seems everyone and their mother wants to be in the phone market. Anecdotally everyone I know either has a Samsung or Iphone, 99 percent of the news you'll see on this site is covering these brands with the occasional Chinese phone manufactures (Huawei, Xiaomi) or the old hey remember Blackberry piece.

I think the hardest thing facing newcomers to this market is breaking into the lexicon, pseudo brand recognition but not really. For instance few people in the general public realize that Sony makes one hell of a smart phone with their Xperia. But you'll sooner find a unicorn walking down the street than seeing an Xperia in the hands of a friend or even a complete stranger.

Think in terms of MP3 players, at their height Ipod somehow become synonymous with all MP3 players just like in the early 90's you weren't playing video games you were playing Nintendo.

Point being even if your phone is a great piece of tech, sometimes society as a whole could care less because it isnt something they know or even care to learn about.