(Amazon chief executive Jeffrey P. Bezos is the owner of The Washington Post.)

The price cut comes as Amazon and other manufacturers try to settle on the right price for a tablet. Apple recently dropped the price of its cheapest iPad to $330 — far above what Amazon is offering — in an acknowledgment that people aren't as eager to update their tablets as they are their smartphones.

AD

AD

Amazon also seems to know that you aren't sure if you can justify buying a new tablet. It's trying to make them cheap enough that you might not care.

Tablets have become a tricky product for many gadget-makers to address, as enthusiasm for the devices continues to cool. In an industry obsessed with growth, tablets have been a particularly dark spot, with analysis firm IDC recently reporting that sales of tablets are currently down 8.5 percent from the same time in 2016.

Tablets saw incredible growth between 2010 and 2013, filling the need for a device as portable as a smartphone but still a bit more powerful. But now, large-screened smartphones and a surge in sales of detachable laptops — essentially, tablets with a keyboard — are growing and have many of the same selling points as tablets. For consumers looking for something on which they can watch video, shop or peruse comfortably while watching television, there are now more versatile options.

AD

AD

Shipments of Amazon tablets, IDC said, are currently down 8 percent from the same time last year.

So why bother? Gadgets are valuable to Amazon, because they make it much easier for people to buy things from the company. Independent analysts estimate that Kindle tablet and e-reader owners spend far more than non-Kindle owners on Amazon.com — up to 30 percent more, according to a report from the Consumer Intelligence Research Group. (Prime subscribers spend about twice as much.) As a sort of Trojan horse, then, Amazon devices are incredibly effective.

Even with slowing growth, IDC said that Amazon's strategy of dropping prices to sell its tablets is what's keeping it in the fight for the top-selling tablet manufacturers in the world.

AD

“Regardless of the changing industry dynamics … Amazon seems poised to remain a competitor given its market strategy,” IDC analysts said in the report.

AD

Tablets also give company a way to get its newest software in front of consumers. Alexa, Amazon's voice assistant, is available on both the new, cheaper high-end tablet and Amazon's low-cost Fire. The Fire 7 also boasts a thinner and lighter design, eight hours of battery life and improved WiFi connectivity. It starts with 8 GB of storage that can be expanded to 256 GB with an SD card; there is also a 16 GB model. The Fire 8 HD has 12 hours of battery life and either 16 GB or 32 GB of storage that can also be expanded to 256 GB.

The children's tablets do not have Alexa but both come with a year's subscription to Amazon's parental control software, FreeTime Unlimited. The smaller tablet has 16 GB of expandable storage and 8 hours of battery life. The Fire HD 8 Kids Edition has 32 GB of expandable storage and promises 12 hours of battery life.