Amazon is expected to bring out a bigger version of the Kindle Fire, as it gradually grows the size of its tablets.
Amazon arguably started the small tablet fad when it launched the 7-inch Kindle Fire in November of 2011. And it followed that with 8.9-inch model, announced in September 2012.
Now it’s moving up to the 10-inch class, Richard Shim, an analyst at NPD DisplaySearch, told CNET.
The biggest Kindle Fire yet will sport a stunning 2,560×1,600-pixel density 10.1-inch display, according to Shim. That’s about 300 pixels per inch (PPI), considerably denser than Apple’s Retina iPad 4 with 264 PPI.
And that matches the 2,560×1,600 10-inch screen on Google’s Nexus 10, touted as the highest-resolution tablet yet.
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Mass production of the display for the 10-inch Kindle Fire will start in the third quarter, Shim said.
Amazon is also expected to refresh its 7-inch and 8.9-inch Kindle Fires, with the goal of getting all models to a 300 PPI, Shim added.
In the latest figures from IDC, Amazon was ranked No. 4 in tablet shipments, with 3.7 percent of the market.
Amazon did not respond to a request for comment.