Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

Here's How Much Amazon's Dis Will Cost Apple and Google

It's not an unprecedented move, but it's a rare one for Amazon, which is staying in business with its two rivals for other products -- even tablets where iPad and Nexus devices compete with its Kindles. Even though Amazon is firing this shot, one could argue that the war was started by Apple and Google, since neither Chromecast nor Apple TV offers Amazon's Prime Video app.

That's a telling thing, because Amazon.com will still be selling Roku's streaming players, which control more market share than any other company, according to an August report by Parks Associates. The online retailer cited the lack of Prime Video as a reason for stopping sales of the two devices in an email it sent to sellers.

From the article "Here's How Much Amazon's Dis Will Cost Apple and Google" by Daniel B. Kline.

Previously In The News

The Smart Money: Partnership Possibilities in the Connected Home

Parks Associates will be presenting this data and more at CONNECTIONS: The Premier Connected Home Conference, May 13-15 at the Renaissance Dallas at Plano Legacy (www.connectionsus.com). The event wil...

Smarter Energy at Home: How Consumers Are Taking Control with Smart Home Tech

GearBrain has long covered the smart home space and frequently sources Parks Associates' research for our reporting, including this article. Parks’ recent findings and the expert insights shared at CE...

More than 278 million viewers will watch subscription ad-supported streaming services by 2029 – Parks Associates

Parks Associates' new white paper, Interactive & Shoppable TV: Next Wave of CTV Revenues, released in partnership with Adeia, focuses on the service provider opportunity to advance the consumer experi...

Streaming paradox: More options, less clarity in business models

Recent data from Parks Associates noted the extent of this shift: 59% of subscriptions across the eight leading streaming video-on-demand services in the third quarter of 2024 were basic-tier subscrip...