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Friday, 9 December 2011

Kindle Fire Tablet














  

Specification as follows:

Price;
$199
$300 less than iPad 2

Screen;
7”, in-plane switching display

Pixel Density;
169 ppi & more than 16 million colors
28% higher pixel density than iPad 2

Weight;
14.6 oz
iPad 2 is 46% heavier

Content;
Movies, shows, songs, games, apps,
magazines & books from Amazon

Breadth of Ecosystem;
Most Amazon content can be enjoyed
on your Kindle Fire and many other
devices, including iPhone, iPad,
Android, BlackBerry, Windows 7
phones, internet-ready TVs, Roku,
TiVo, and through your web browser

Buy Once,Enjoy Everywhere;
With Whispersync, your book library,
last page read, notes, and highlights
sync across your devices and you can
stream a movie on one device and finish
it on your TV, without losing your place

E-mail ;
yes

Web Browser;
Amazon Silk, the cloud-accelerated web browser

Flash Support;
yes

Processor;
1GHz dual core

Storage;
8GB flash memory + free cloud storage
for all your Amazon content so you
never run out of space

Battery Life;
Up to 7.5 hours of video playback,
with wireless off

Multitasking;
Yes

Multitasking

Yes

YesWireless Capability;
Wi-Fi

Speakers;
Stereo

Prime Instant Video;
Amazon Prime members can instantly
stream nearly 13,000 popular movies &
TV shows at no additional cost

Kindle Owners' Lending Library;
Amazon Prime members can borrow
from thousands of popular books
at no additional cost




The good: The Kindle Fire is a 7-inch tablet that links seamlessly with Amazon's impressive collection of digital music, video, magazine, and book services in one easy-to-use package. It boasts a great Web browser, and its curated Android app store includes most of the big must-have apps (such as Netflix, Pandora, and Hulu). The Fire has an ultra-affordable price tag, and the screen quality is exceptional for the price.

The bad: The budget price means no premium features (3G wireless, cameras, microphone, GPS, and location services are absent), but the biggest issues are its paltry storage (only 8GB of storage--with no expansion slot), lack of Bluetooth, and dearth of parental controls. Screen brightness could be better, and the app selection doesn't match Apple's or Google's (at least for now). Also, you'll need an Amazon Prime subscription to take advantage of some of the more-unique features.

The bottom line: Though it lacks the tech specs found on more-expensive Apple and Android tablets, the $199 Kindle Fire is an outstanding entertainment value that prizes simplicity over techno-wizardry.

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