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State Dept. Cancels $16.5M Kindle Contract 117

itwbennett writes "The U.S. Department of State will be canceling a $16.5 million Amazon order that included 2,500 Kindle Touch e-readers, 50 pieces of content, and 'required provision of a secure, centrally managed content distribution and management platform.' The department said that it will be re-examining its requirements for the program. Those requirements had called for a single-function device with text-to-speech, a 'battery life of no less than about 8 hours of continuous reading or approximately 7.5 hours of video playback,' and free Wi-Fi. The Kindle was the only project that met that original set of requirements."
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State Dept. Cancels $16.5M Kindle Contract

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  • sucks to be Amazon (Score:5, Interesting)

    by TheRealQuestor ( 1750940 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @09:32AM (#41045049)
    wonder who they ticked off this time
    • by Cute Fuzzy Bunny ( 2234232 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @01:06PM (#41046775)

      wonder who they ticked off this time

      Eh, someone up the food chain realized that they weren't buying ipads, and those are what the cool kids have. Cue the story about them opening a contract with apple to do the same exact thing, only for double or triple the cost.

      They're doing that here in California. Our state budget left the rails and took out every major city, and we're letting go of teachers left and right. But we found money to buy 5 ipads for every classroom from one of those buckets where the money can only be spent one way. No integration, no IT strategy...just 5 paperweights with a quiz on them about a book, and you have to transcribe the results from the ipad to a piece of paper when you're done, as there is no rollup.

      I just want to know what person sits in what office in the state organization that agreeably says "Oh, you want to donate money to our schools? Yeah, well those ipads would be pretty much useless...feel like funding something critical thats being cut or how about we buy cheaper tablets, get 20 per class instead of 5, and get someone to do a nice integration job with our curriculum?

      We missed a prime opportunity last year when HP (a california company) decided to get out of the touchpad business and sold tens of thousands of them for below cost. Someone from the state should have gotten them to donate them, make more so every kid could have one, and build the software and support infrastructure with that. Replace all textbooks and teaching materials with the pad. Give HP tax credits so its worth it for them to take it on. Hell, it took the NFL no time at all to switch from playbooks and lots of pieces of paper to a tablet solution. If they can do it, I'm pretty sure HP and the state of california could have done it.

      • Idk how it can be double or triple the cost. At $16,500,000 for 2500 kindle(assuming that's correct), it's already at $6,600 per kindle. If the majority of the costs are just side costs, then iPads will just raise it marginally.

        • by tyrione ( 134248 )

          Idk how it can be double or triple the cost. At $16,500,000 for 2500 kindle(assuming that's correct), it's already at $6,600 per kindle. If the majority of the costs are just side costs, then iPads will just raise it marginally.

          Who said the original poster was mathematically competent?

        • Idk how it can be double or triple the cost. At $16,500,000 for 2500 kindle(assuming that's correct), it's already at $6,600 per kindle. If the majority of the costs are just side costs, then iPads will just raise it marginally.

          Any time you take a contract thats been in existence for a while and re-do it with a new supplier that uses more expensive hardware, you can pretty much count on a significant increase in the project cost.

  • Spec'd the Kindle (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @09:33AM (#41045059)
    So the requirements were for a Kindle and only a Kindle? Nice try by someone ready to retire and move to private industry.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by kenh ( 9056 )

      Seriously, on the "back" of a contract for 2,500 Kindles? What kind of "payoff" do you think they'd get for negotiating a 2-3,000 piece contract for an item the gov't would by at or below retail?

      I think their real goal was to try and avoid the political stigma of a set of requirements that would lead them to buying a couple thousand iPads (while being good/great devices have so many additional uses that their purchase could easily be attacked politically)...

      • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @01:15PM (#41046839)
        The goal is lock-in. First purchase is a balancing act, small enough to get through without too much attention, but big enough that any follow-on has to be for the same equipment. Typically the follow-ons are worth several times the initial contract, and are negotiated separately.
      • Seriously, on the "back" of a contract for 2,500 Kindles? What kind of "payoff" do you think they'd get for negotiating a 2-3,000 piece contract for an item the gov't would by at or below retail?

        If you read the article, you would see that the high cost is not from the hardware but implied from other thing else (below).

        The acquisition by the department included an immediate need for 2,500 e-readers and 50 titles of content, and required provision of a secure, centrally managed content distribution and management platform to manage unlimited number of devices, besides the ability to access and download content over 3G cellular networks and Wi-Fi connections worldwide, according to a note in June.

        My problem is not the cost, but why? Why do they need an e-reader for? Can't they use something else instead of e-reader? The cost for any electronic stuff often times is not from its hardware. Also, what benefits do they get from using this product? Is the benefit worthwhile? If it is not worthwhile right now, how long do they need to have the product in order to break even with its

    • Re:Spec'd the Kindle (Score:5, Informative)

      by MonsterTrimble ( 1205334 ) <monstertrimble&hotmail,com> on Sunday August 19, 2012 @09:48AM (#41045139)
      Actually, I see this all the time in the public sector and have done it on countless occasions myself.

      The reason Amazon is the only one which meets the specs is because the specs were chosen so only Amazon could meet them. It's how you can exclude a vendor (or vendors) you have no desire of even giving the opportunity to win the quote. This can be because of past history with the company's sales team, poor delivery, poor service, poor quality, and so on. While in a strict lower cost item sense it's bad, it is often not the case when you consider all the other factors. Extra time spent caused by poor quality or poor delivery can often cost far more than the additional money spent on a product which has very good quality and is delivered on time.
      • by fm6 ( 162816 )

        I'll assume you're being honest and weren't motivated by bribery or the desire to get a cushy job with your vendor on. Because both motives are pretty common reasons for using the spec to exclude competitors.

        In any case, here's hoping you don't get audited. Bidding procedures exist for a reason, and people who circumvent them can get in a lot of trouble.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        It's how you can exclude a vendor (or vendors) you have no desire of even giving the opportunity to win the quote. This can be because of past history with the company's sales team, poor delivery, poor service, poor quality, and so on.

        In other words words, the devil you know.

        I've been on the other side of that equation, both as a winner and a loser. MOST often I found this vendor-slanted specification phenomenon was the result of the procurement rules UNDER-weighting confidence in the vendor. That's because we don't trust the judgment of government worker bees. A CEO can make a deal with a handshake on the golf course. Because CEOs are supposed to be geniuses, we trust his gut instinct. We think government workers are idiots, so we don't

      • "While in a strict lower cost item sense it's bad"

        Cost != price.

        You sort of addressed that in your later comments, but your comment perpetuates the common misconception that price = cost. I practice, cost = price plus lifetime support and accessory/software/add-on costs. And that's still not the relevant question. The relevant question is cost per year, so take the above divided be average usable life.

    • Re:Spec'd the Kindle (Score:5, Informative)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @09:54AM (#41045177)

      That is common. We go by the joke we called a fare bidding process. Everyone denies it but this is how it works.
      The Government finds a vendor they want to use. Once they find the vendor they like, they often get the resumes of the people who will be working, or the product specifications, then they use that to make their bid. Because the Bid has a detail on what they want, it is hard for a competitor to compete with the bid, because every product and service is a little different. Even though they may be able to help solve the same problems.

      If you look at lot of these bids, you see things like
      Web Site Development
      Required Sills:
      HTML 10+ years
      JavaScript 8+ years
      Photoshop 6+ years
      ASP.NET 9+ years
      FORTRAN 77 4+ years
      C++ 12+ years
      MUMPS 3+ years

      You see bids like that you know they have already picked someone they want to use. The Job doesn't even require FORTRAN or MUMPS or C++ however they may have some in house applications that still run these systems so they add it in their bids, but they have already picked who they want and they know that they have those skills, and they also have similar systems on their side (To show that they have a need for such technology).

      They did all the paper work correctly and there isn't any sign of corruption. However they found a way to bypass the fair and competitive bidding process.

      • by KPU ( 118762 )

        Why would somebody with 12+ years of C++ experience be doing web site development?

        • They were obviously driven insane and are now recovering slowly.
        • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

          Why would somebody with 12+ years of C++ experience be doing web site development?

          because the company needs it? besides plenty of operations that interface with users through website need c++ somewhere in the backend..

      • by dpilot ( 134227 )

        There is perpetual complaint about "government messing around with business," but clearly not enough complaint about "business messing around with government." I would also argue that the ramifications of the latter are far worse than the former. Think for a moment about the "military-industrial complex" and the number of complex defense contracts that are apparently largely a mechanism to get fat sucking off of the government (and taxpayer) teat. The place where it gets really bad is when we don't get t

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by MightyYar ( 622222 )

          I would also argue that the ramifications of the latter are far worse than the former.

          I would argue that they are almost the same thing... a corporation is just an extension of government. It gets it's charter from the government, and it can only exist because of government. The government can make almost completely arbitrary rules to regulate the corporation, and in fact the very laws that create the corporation are themselves a form of regulation.

          Then the corporation uses a portion of it's revenue to lobby the government. This is similar to the way that government-funded and government-man

          • by dpilot ( 134227 )

            How do you suggest breaking the cycle then? IMHO if the founding fathers had seen what corporations would become, they would have done a specific delineation of rights in the Constitution. Perhaps it would be as some sort of "collections of peoples", actually rather similar to a church, when you think about it. As it is, corporations are getting everything but the vote, less of the liabilities, and the recent and not-so-recent "personhood" rulings form the Supremes indeed make mere people second-class ci

            • I'm certainly open to something "radical" like you propose - but I don't pretend to be smart or knowledgeable enough to know the answers.

              I know that I want the NY Times to exist with free speech rights.

              I know that I don't want corporations to be allowed to lobby or get involved in the political sphere.

              Those are two things that are very hard to reconcile, but I think it must be possible.

              One idea I have is this: corporations should only be allowed to advertise a product that they sell. If the NY Times wants t

          • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
            Corporations are not extension of the government. I think there needs to be a separation of corp and state like our separation of church and state.

            At least unions have some sort of democratic feedback. Even public corps are all non-binding votes with no recourse for owners except dumping their stock. The management is in total control. Even privately owned companies are disconnected from the owners, look at Bain Capital, Romney was the sole owner and he claims no control or responsibility for decisions an
            • Corporations are not extension of the government.

              I cannot agree. Absent a government, can a corporation exist? If so, how?

              • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
                Many corporations are multi-national. They are just a sort of limited liability partnership which takes the form of a legal fiction in our society. However, they could easily exist without a government. What would prevent it?

                They require a charter because our society recognizes (some) of the ways they can wield power and the founding fathers were familiar with the ability of corporations to do evil unless they are regulated.
                • What would prevent it?

                  You said it yourself: limited liability.

                  You are right, a partnership is sort of like a corporation - but the partners still have full liability for their actions. If the partnership were to default, then the debtor would come after the partners.

                  • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
                    So, without the government, you don't think it would be possible to obfuscate ownership enough to avoid liability? That's risible.
                    • Ripping someone off and then hiding is age-old. We call them con-men, grifters, etc. They almost certainly predate any kind of government.

                      Having a legal framework in place that protects a person from their own actions requires government.

                    • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
                      So corporations are regulated grifters...? Many colonial sites were organized as corporations, the revolution was as much about resisting corporate rule as resisting British rule.
                      Since shortly after the civil war, corporations have wrested power from we the people, they are not subordinate to the government as was originally intended, but citizens of the government with full rights of any citizen.
                      I apologize for rising to the bait in your straw man argument, corporations cannot exist without some legal fram
                    • I wouldn't quite call corporations grifters - it's more akin to an extra layer of bankruptcy law. We have an aversion to debtors prison in this country, and the corporate entity allows people to go even further, protecting most of their personal assets. The difference is that with a grifter, you didn't know what you were dealing with until you were scammed. When dealing with a corporation, you know full well what you are getting into.

                      Corporations can be chartered by government without being able to influence that government. Current charter rules removed most government accountability decades ago.

                      I agree and was not suggesting that this is an inherent problem without a

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        How does the government put together complex bids? They hire a consultant. Often it's unethical consultants driving work to friends. You don't think that the procurement department actually writes the RFPs themselves, do you?
      • This happened to me. Came across what would be a perfect job upgrade for me on the USAGov job website. Long list of requirements, but I had all the right experience. By application ended up being 12 pages long. Sent it in, a couple of weeks later I got a personal letter from the hiring manager/department head saying who they picked including a brief bio of him. Same skill set, but worked in that department at a lower grade. I essentially got a freaking apology letter from them for wasting my time. Ne

      • You see bids like that you know they have already picked someone they want to use. The Job doesn't even require FORTRAN or MUMPS or C++ however they may have some in house applications that still run these systems so they add it in their bids, but they have already picked who they want and they know that they have those skills, and they also have similar systems on their side (To show that they have a need for such technology).

        They did all the paper work correctly and there isn't any sign of corruption. However they found a way to bypass the fair and competitive bidding process.

        What's really funny is when a job posting like that is put out, tailored to match somebodies resume, and HR keeps rejecting the targeted person's resume because they don't know what they are doing. (In the case that happened in my group was that the automated software HR used to cherry pick resumes didn't think the guy had the right qualifications. The manager had to rewrite the job offer and have the guy resubmit his resume five times before it finally made it through the process and a human in HR would ev

    • That's how government contracts work. Also, this is how government job positions work. You write the requirements to match exactly the single person you want and only that person.

      • by jftitan ( 736933 )

        With my previous experience, THIS is exactly what pisses me off about Government contracting.

        I applied for specific positions before whereas I was over qualified for the job listed. First interview, I nail it, with comments like, you are just too qualified for the position, however your the best candidate I've interviewed. With comments like that, I constantly fall into the trap of the followup comment. "However, government requires me to interview two other candidates for the position."

      • by jbengt ( 874751 )

        So the requirements were for a Kindle and only a Kindle?

        That's how government contracts work.

        In my experience (construction) government bids do not work that way. In fact, the contract documemts I have made for various federal, state, and local governments were typically required to explicitly list at least three manufacturers for each product. (The hard part that sometimes gets overlooked is that companies are so busy buying each other, merging, and selling off parts, that three different brands that were made by three different companies yesterday may very well be all under one corporation t

        • You are missing the point. You list THREE manufacturers for each product, but you write the requirements that match the one you want and ONLY the one you want.

          Hell, I've gotten two jobs because they wanted me and wrote the reqs based off of my resume.

    • by deKernel ( 65640 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:16AM (#41045351)

      Guessing you didn't read the article. No device other than the Kindle met the requirements AND the requrements were quite sane.

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        The only thing really "Kindle specific" was the free WiFi.

        Everything else is stuff that your book reading spouse might be interested in, especially the part about idle time.

      • Re:Spec'd the Kindle (Score:4, Interesting)

        by zippthorne ( 748122 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @12:54PM (#41046657) Journal

        Oddly, The Kindle doesn't meet the requirements, either. The Kindle and Kindle Touch don't do video, and the Kindle Fire doesn't do 3G...

        Also, the requirements are not specific to Amazon - B&N has devices which match the requirements as fully as Amazon does, including the 3G download requirement. If they wanted to force Amazon to be the only supplier, they would've had to require that the device allow web browsing over the 3G link.

  • Is a Raytheon tablet in the works?

    • by sizzzzlerz ( 714878 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:43AM (#41045559)

      Yeah. I'll be battle-hardened to withstand 20G shock, survive submersion in seawater to 500 feet depth, be rad-hard, and have full-up mil spec documentation. It's yours for $127,343.36 per copy. Do you need the HumVee mounting kit as well?

      • by rwv ( 1636355 )

        yours for $127,343.36 per copy

        I know it's tongue-in-cheek, but a device with the 4 features you listed will end up costing far more than $100k/each. But given the features listed... the only application that comes to mind is exploring lakes/oceans on a celestial body that isn't Earth.... which would be awesomely remarkable.

        • Oh, the miracles of buying in quantity!

        • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
          An iPad in a Ziplock would be cheaper and better. The first 50,000 died after 5 minutes? Replace them, still cheaper than one that does it all. But government never seems to even consider adapting commodity requirements and changing process, even if 1/10th the cost.
          • by Anonymous Coward

            Pinned down by unknown hostiles? Incoming mortar fire? Team communications gear down? No problem, have IT send you another one; you aren't going anywhere for a while.

  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @09:36AM (#41045085) Homepage Journal

    A federal procurement contract with a set of requirements that can only be satisfied by one vendor?

    Unheard of!

  • Unless they're considering the need for such devices entirely, I'm not seeing how an alternate vendor is going to come in much lower than that. The Kindle is pretty reasonably priced as far as hand-held reading devices go, probably even moreso in a bulk purchase.

    • want to bet that the new MS Surface tablet is going to meet the specs? Not only that but it runs Windows, Outlook and connects to the exchange server while being compatible with all of the existing MS infrastructure the dept has.

  • Does the Kindle Touch play video out of the box?
    • by Shoten ( 260439 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:13AM (#41045335)

      It said "or," as in "8 hours of continuous reading or approximately 7.5 hours of video playback."

      I suspect that the challenge here had to do with procurement rules. It's against the rules to design an RFP or RFQ in such a way that only one vendor can fulfill the requirements. It sometimes happens that the requirements are immutable and the RFP ends up being built that way, but that has to be proven, and I find it difficult to imagine that the Kindle is such a totally mind-blowing device that a Nook, for example, couldn't actually meet their needs as well. (I own a Kindle, and love it, mind you...it's just that the Kindle hasn't been the unapproachable paramount that the iPad is in the tablet market, in my opinion.) So I think someone had a predilection for Kindles, wrote the spec that way, and is now getting bitten by that no-no.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:13AM (#41045333) Journal

    > canceling a $16.5 million Amazon order

    Yey! The government just reduced its spending by .00037% this year!

    It still continues to borrow 9/10ths of a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier every day.

    • They already allocated the money to the department. They'll just have a bigger holiday party this year.

  • by guttentag ( 313541 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:15AM (#41045345) Journal
    The state department realized it was going to cost a lot more than originally expected since they'll have to pay sales tax by the time the shipment is ready.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Except for the fact that I don't think the US Federal Government has to pay sales tax... :-)

  • $6600 per Kindle! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rollingcalf ( 605357 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:49AM (#41045601)

    $16.5 million divided by 2500 = $6600.

    Even though that includes some content and services on top of the Kindle itself, I don't see how it reaches $6600 per unit without most of it being waste and kickbacks.

    • by aardvarkjoe ( 156801 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @10:54AM (#41045633)

      $16.5 million divided by 2500 = $6600.

      Even though that includes some content and services on top of the Kindle itself, I don't see how it reaches $6600 per unit without most of it being waste and kickbacks.

      Maybe they forgot to select the "free super saver shipping" option.

    • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @11:25AM (#41045893)
      Yeah. You'd think that this was a contract to procure hammers or toilet seats or something like that.
    • by gaelfx ( 1111115 )

      Well, it's about $100 bucks for the Kindle, but then you have to realize, they were planning to use Oracle's Linux on the devices.

    • by Nanoda ( 591299 )

      Having dealt with selling a government some hardware and services, I can understand charging way more. They don't just call up and order what's on the shelf like your other customers. They want studies and paperwork and certifications and documents and reviews and more paperwork and certificates and contracts and guarantees and the whole process takes a year for what takes your other customers a week.

      Seriously, I'm all for accountability in government, but this is the kind of stuff you get for it.

      • by rwv ( 1636355 )

        All kidding aside... they are *probably* trying to go paperless. Laptops/desktops allow a paperless office (e-mail, databases of information), but when you're reading and reviewing documents printed pages were king right up until the Kindle Touch. I'm actually surprised it just says Touch and not DX since the bigger size is supposed to be better for displaying graphs/charts/tables. But for reviewing and commenting on straight-text the Touch is a phenomenal platform.

        Now... I can't guess what the savings

    • If you read the procurement doc, it requires that the contractor provide 3G services to the devices globally, forever.

      That's not cheap.

      • by jpapon ( 1877296 )
        Depends on what they mean by "3G services". If all they can download are ebooks from Amazon, then it's not expensive at all. In fact, if they have to purchase those ebooks, it's basically free for Amazon.

        If it's 3G services that they can use as a general data connection, then yeah, that could be pricey. Of course, Amazon already has those 3G contracts with providers all over the globe, so there may not actually be any additional cost to Amazon.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 19, 2012 @11:20AM (#41045867)

    Go read it.. SAQMMA12R0272 at fedbizopps.gov some highlights:
    "The US Department of State intends to award an indefinite-delivery indefinite-quantity commercial items contract on or about June 19, 2012, on a sole source basis to Amazon Digital Services, Inc. of Seattle WA for the commercial supplies and services described below. The anticipated value is $16,500,000 over the life of the contract, which shall be one base year plus 4 option years."

    "The Contractor shall provide 3G services globally. The Contractor is responsible for all costs associated with 3G services globally (i.e., downloading content and access to the Internet Browser)." {Better make sure it works in Ulan Bator}
    "The Contractor will supply content to the device delivered under this contract, but shall also support the delivery of content to the following other devices currently utilized by the Department of State: Apple iOS, Android, Amazon Kindle, RIM Blackberry, PC, and MAC"
    "The Contractor shall provide a dedicated 24/7 help desk to support inquires from the Department of State and its partners in countries specified in Attachment A."
    -------------------
    it's not 16M for 2500 kindles.. it's for a package of services, secure distribution channels, etc., The "initial delivery" is for 2500 readers, with options for a lot more, within the 16M total. And a starting batch of 50 documents, which Amazon would have to convert. 1 initial year plus 4 option years, too.

    They wanted a locked down platform which could NOT be used as a general purpose computer or have user installed software (knocking out the iPad, jailbroken or not)

    • by kcitren ( 72383 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @01:48PM (#41047053)
      Also, the system is not tied to the Kindle. It needs to be able to push content to iPhones / iPads, Android devices, Blackberries, Windows and Apple PCs over a global 3g network. Hell, the global 3G network is going to cost more than 16M over the life of the contract. According to Amazons 3g coverage maps, they've got the North America, most of Europe covered (except for Belarus), India, Japan, Australia, and a few spots in South America, the Middle East, China, and SE asia.
  • They must have gotten wind of the iPad Mini, and are backing out of the contract so they can use IOS devices.

  • Hadnt noticed that before!
  • Nothing sneaky here. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Dcnjoe60 ( 682885 ) on Sunday August 19, 2012 @01:05PM (#41046751)

    Nothing sneaky here with Amazon being the only e-reader selected. From the actual article, the iPad was/is not classified as an e-reader, but is a tablet/computer and the bid was for e-readers. The nook is not mentioned, but the requirement for text to speech would have eliminated it at the time the specs were created. Most other ereaders at the time didn't support that, either.

    Now some may want to arugue that it was intentional to only allow the kindle, but a much more likely scenario is that the device selected needs to accomodate people with visual impairment.

    Nothing sneaky here with Amazon being the sole provider. On the otherhand, it if they end up buy 2,500 Windows Surface RT at twice the price, then, that should really be looked into. Because, like the iPad, it's not an ereader, either.

  • I thought a contract's supposed to be an agreement to exchange value. Once you make the contract, you have to follow through on it.

    For normal people, it's hard to think that you could just cancel a contract.

    Don't like your car payments? I "canceled" the car loan.

    So how is it that large organizations can just cancel contracts whenever they want.

    Can't Amazon sue for specific performance?

    Or, it wasn't a contract to begin with, and they were only thinking about it.

    • Back-out clauses, I suspect. I've bought a house or two and these were in there. "Subject to finance" or "Subject to engineering report". Maybe the ones here were a cooling-down period, or some such.

      Big companies can do this 'cause they have their own lawyers. I 'bought' a house once and my lawyer added in some clauses he recommended to the sale contract. As it turned out, just as well - the company posted me out of town for about a year. I used one of the clauses to get out of the house sale. Fe
  • Pretty sure that State Department knows that Microsoft is releasing a Surface tablet soon with more power than the Kindle and that Apple is rumored to be launching a 7" tablet by years end. Both of those would be competitive to the Kindle FIRE price points, and let's not forget about Nexus...but my guess is that either Microsoft or Apple will land the contract (betting on Microsoft more than Apple.)
  • Another confirmation that iPad Mini is about to come out?
  • So how were they planning on playing video on a Kindle touch?
  • Think of all the years of expert US anthropologists going out and collecting data, the low cpu designs, the decades of text to voice patents, the extra long battery life....
    Just so some other part of the US gov can have a box to broadcast:
    Don't run! We are your friends!
    We come in peace! We come in peace!
  • What did Amazon say about Obama? Someone did not like it.

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