Make a list of all of the standout or even emerging consumer tech trends of 2014 and, no matter what it is -- wearable technology, music streaming, cable cutting or the Internet of Things -- Amazon is involved with its own service or product.
It's telling that when asked who he saw as his company's biggest direct competitor, Google's chairman, Eric Schmidt, recently singled out the online retailer.
"Many people think our main competition is Bing or Yahoo," he said during a visit to a Native Instruments, software and hardware company in Berlin. "But, really, our biggest search competitor is Amazon. People don't think of Amazon as search, but if you are looking for something to buy, you are more often than not looking for it on Amazon."
But as well as search, Amazon is starting to compete with both Google and Apple in a host of areas.
Perhaps its most innovative product of the year, Amazon Echo is a smart speaker announced in November, the sort of thing expected to emerge from one of Google's top secret labs.
Always listening, the Echo doubles as a personal assistant able to answer questions and perform web searches and keep users abreast of current affairs, traffic news and the weather.
All of which led TechCrunch's Darrell Etherington to say: "The whole thing is a tad baffling, but also intriguing in that it's fairly unique among major tech company product introductions."
But as well as positioning itself at the center of the Internet of Things, Amazon is also proving it knows a thing or two about how to make a tablet that people actually want and value. Its growing range of Kindle eReaders and Fire tablets -- which this year expanded again to include a 6-inch model and a new colorful, toughened device aimed at children -- beat the iPad into second place in October's JD Power tablet satisfaction awards.
Amazon's expanding realms
It doesn't always get things right -- the Fire Phone, the smartphone with a 3D screen launched this summer -- was universally panned. But the company that Jeff Bezos built simply dusts itself off and tries something else instead.
As well as launching more new devices in 2014 than Apple -- it has also rolled out a smart set-top box and a streaming dongle this year as well as a smartphone compatible credit card reader -- Amazon has opened its own computer games studio, launched its own virtual currency, started producing original kids' TV shows, launched its own music streaming service and is about to start offering customers 4K ultra-high-definition video content. And in doing so is positioning itself as a rival and alternative to everything and everyone from Netflix to Spotify.
One of Amazon's latest ventures, currently being tested in select US states, is to offer customers access to a handyman or other expert when buying a product or device from its site that needs professional installation. This week, the retail company also launched a line of premium everyday products called Amazon Elements for its Prime subscribers, starting with diapers with other goods to follow.
As for the year ahead, the company is looking to open its first physical store, in New York; to move into the travel and hospitality market with its first hotel booking service; and to start seriously testing the capabilities of drones for making deliveries at its R1D facility in Cambridge, UK.
It's telling that when asked who he saw as his company's biggest direct competitor, Google's chairman, Eric Schmidt, recently singled out the online retailer.
"Many people think our main competition is Bing or Yahoo," he said during a visit to a Native Instruments, software and hardware company in Berlin. "But, really, our biggest search competitor is Amazon. People don't think of Amazon as search, but if you are looking for something to buy, you are more often than not looking for it on Amazon."
But as well as search, Amazon is starting to compete with both Google and Apple in a host of areas.
Perhaps its most innovative product of the year, Amazon Echo is a smart speaker announced in November, the sort of thing expected to emerge from one of Google's top secret labs.
Always listening, the Echo doubles as a personal assistant able to answer questions and perform web searches and keep users abreast of current affairs, traffic news and the weather.
All of which led TechCrunch's Darrell Etherington to say: "The whole thing is a tad baffling, but also intriguing in that it's fairly unique among major tech company product introductions."
But as well as positioning itself at the center of the Internet of Things, Amazon is also proving it knows a thing or two about how to make a tablet that people actually want and value. Its growing range of Kindle eReaders and Fire tablets -- which this year expanded again to include a 6-inch model and a new colorful, toughened device aimed at children -- beat the iPad into second place in October's JD Power tablet satisfaction awards.
Amazon's expanding realms
It doesn't always get things right -- the Fire Phone, the smartphone with a 3D screen launched this summer -- was universally panned. But the company that Jeff Bezos built simply dusts itself off and tries something else instead.
As well as launching more new devices in 2014 than Apple -- it has also rolled out a smart set-top box and a streaming dongle this year as well as a smartphone compatible credit card reader -- Amazon has opened its own computer games studio, launched its own virtual currency, started producing original kids' TV shows, launched its own music streaming service and is about to start offering customers 4K ultra-high-definition video content. And in doing so is positioning itself as a rival and alternative to everything and everyone from Netflix to Spotify.
One of Amazon's latest ventures, currently being tested in select US states, is to offer customers access to a handyman or other expert when buying a product or device from its site that needs professional installation. This week, the retail company also launched a line of premium everyday products called Amazon Elements for its Prime subscribers, starting with diapers with other goods to follow.
As for the year ahead, the company is looking to open its first physical store, in New York; to move into the travel and hospitality market with its first hotel booking service; and to start seriously testing the capabilities of drones for making deliveries at its R1D facility in Cambridge, UK.