The 411 On The Kindle Fire

Posted by taoufiq  |  at  1:53 AM No comments

By Alan Sutton


Chances are high, if you're here, you're thinking about purchasing the Kindle Fire. You are probably a Kindle owner planning to upgrade, or perhaps you are looking into the Fire as an e-reader and tablet. In terms of pricing, it will not get better than the Kindle Fire. Amazon introduced their custom Android tablet in Nov of 2011 with a price tag under $200. It seemed to be a thought out move just before Christmas. It swiftly became one of Amazon's top sellers.

The very first Kindle was introduced in 2007. The system was around the size of a medium paperback book developed specifically for reading. When Amazon made available the 3rd generation of Kindle, which mainly mirrored the 1st with the same E-Ink technology found in black and white only, Barnes and Noble launched the Nook Color. Consumers started customizing their Android powered Nooks to not only read books, but to play 3D games and run apps in color. The Nook Color completely revolutionised the 7-inch tablet market.

It seemed to be a no-brainer for Amazon to answer Barnes and Noble with the Kindle Fire. The Kindle Fire runs a custom version of Google's Android Gingerbread operating-system. The extremely well-designed and user-friendly interface, known as the Carousel, makes it a simple device for everyone. The Kindle Fire is the 1st Kindle with a completely functional browser. It's not just any browser either. It's name is Silk and offers users a very computer-like Internet experience.

Since Amazon has always been an internet seller of books and music, they have used the Kindle Fire to monopolize entertainment. Along with the Fire, they rolled out a zero cost month of membership for their Prime program allowing users a chance to access more than 20,000 videos and TV shows. Users can find virtually every kind of content for the Kindle Fire including Android apps. There's a large selection of this content that's available completely free, consequently it fits any budget.

The Amazon Kindle Fire downloads content in just seconds through a Wi-Fi connection. It has a lot of storage capacity, but any constraint is quelled via free cloud storage currently offered through Amazon. The content delivered electronically to your Kindle is duplicated online with your Amazon account. The focus on reading hasn't faded. Kindle books are now in full color, and you no longer need an external light to read the display.

You might be asking "what's bad about the Kindle Fire?" Is there a reason it is so inexpensive? Amazon designed the Fire to compete with the big boys such as the iPad and also other well known tablets. The price alone makes it a competitor. The functionality is fabulous. The negative would have to be in the constraints put on by Amazon. Consumers can only install apps from the Amazon App Store unless you sideload them by linking the Fire to your computer. Amazon conveniently does not include the cord required to do this with the Fire. Luckily, if you own a third generation Kindle, the cord supplied with that device will work or you can buy one separately on, you guessed it, Amazon's website.

The largest provider of Android apps, the Google Android Market, won't work on the Kindle Fire without major manipulation that will void the warranty. Furthermore, anyone who has used an iPad will spot the lag in the Android Os. Then again, the performance has been significantly improved in the Android 4.0 OS. Some will determine this makes the Kindle Fire a substandard device. Others will determine that such small things make it worthy of its low price. Provided you can get around those few things, then the Kindle Fire may be the device for you.




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