[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Coming full circle: Subpoena demands FBI return Hunter Biden laptop to Delaware repair shop owner

Famed Signature Room Restaurant in Chicago’s Hancock Tower Suddenly Closes Citing ‘Economic Hardship’

Pakistan: Politicians fight on live debate after Nawaz Sharif’s party leader calls Imran Khan ‘Jewish agent’ and ‘bootlicker’

FBI arrests Proud Boys member who disappeared days before sentencing over role in Jan. 6

Winklevoss twins secretly withdrew $280M in assets before crypto firm collapsed: sources

Leader in Richmond Democrat Party group ARRESTED after posting bomb threat against Andy Ngo Virginia talk

Riley Gaines shares video of trans male violence in school: ‘You can’t hide …’

Connecticut DCF Invites Children To Report On Non-Affirming Parents

Trans activists force anthropologists to cancel conference panel discussing the identification of male and female skeletons

Taiwan Launches the Island's First Domestically Made Submarine for Testing

Bail bondsman Scott Hall takes plea deal in Georgia election interference case

Supreme Court Returns To Mountain Of Cases From Conservative 5th Circuit

Facing A U.S. Anti-Corruption Push In Ukraine, Burisma Demanded Hunter Biden Call Dad

Investigators Subpoena Bank Records Of Hunter, James Biden After Uncovering $20 Million In Foreign Payments

San Diego declares a crisis as feds release thousands into the cit

Democrats sour on Bidenomics as it fails to move the needle for voters

‘Trust the Experts’: 1,600 Scientists Sign Declaration Denouncing Climate Change Hoax

US Refuses to Acknowledge Systemic Use of Torture by Its Armed Forces in Iraq

At the Brink?

As the FCC Revisits Net Neutrality, Let's Remember the Day the Internet 'Ended'

British intelligence in the dock for CIA torture

The End of the Road for the Dollar

Time to end the Fed and its mismanagement of our economy

Thanks to US Policy, CCP Controls Key Resources for US Weapons

Europa, a Girl From West Asia, Raped Again by an American Bull

Brickbat: Just a 'Regular Person'

FTC’s Amazon Complaint: Perhaps the Greatest Affront to Consumer and Producer Welfare in Antitrust History

Julian Simon: Expressing the Imago Dei in Economic Terms

It’s the Beginning of the End of This Whole Phony Economy

Russia Might Call for Extradition of Ukrainian Nazi Honored in Canada, Trudeau Blames Parliament Speaker

New York National Park Site to House Thousands of Migrants in Tent City

Review: Shiny Happy People Charts the Downfall of the Duggar Family

The Problem with a Chicago Municipal Grocery Store

Ukrainian Whoppers

Former major city police detective reveals 50% of SIDS cases happened within 48 hours post vaccine

August border encounters of more than 322,000 highest monthly total in U.S. history

Trump Accuses Pro-Life Groups of Being a Political Liability That Exist to Make Money

MINISTRY SPOTLIGHT: Women’s Resource Medical Centers of Southern Nevada

Washington’s Strategic Overextension

Trump adviser: GOP should ‘end’ primary debates, focus on Biden

When it Comes to Preventing Abuse, are All Churches Equal?

Methodist Community in Religious Freedom Fight Against NJ Regarding Sunday Beach Access

Imperial Footprints in Africa: The Dismal Role of AFRICOM

Biden warns Trump's MAGA 'extremist movement' is a threat to democracy

‘Quiet Crisis’: Food Banks Are Inundated With Requests For Aid As Inflation Bites

Illegal Immigrant Launches Unhinged Assault, Leaves Cop Missing A Body Part

¡Conquista! Illegals Plant Venezuela's Flag on Texas Soil

Biden’s DHSLet 200,000 Illegal Immigrants Fly Directly Into 43 Cities

Korean War Vet Booted to Street to Make Room for Illegal Immigrants

War of Economic Corridors: the India-Mideast-Europe Ploy


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Computers-Hacking
See other Computers-Hacking Articles

Title: Review: Kindle Fire a worthwhile bargain
Source: CNN
URL Source: http://www.cnn.com/2011/11/18/tech/ ... /kindle-fire-review/index.html
Published: Nov 18, 2011
Author: Mark Milian
Post Date: 2011-11-18 19:11:22 by A K A Stone
Keywords: None
Views: 1155
Comments: 1

(CNN) -- If you view a tablet as a guilty pleasure, like I do, then buying the Kindle Fire should make you feel a little less guilty.

Amazon's new device doesn't replace a computer for doing e-mail or composing documents, but it's a fun hub for personal entertainment. And at $199, Amazon has managed to greatly undercut the price of Apple's iPad, the dominant tablet, and still churn out a good product.

Apple calls its iPad "a magical and revolutionary product at an unbelievable price." Consider now that for the iPad's $499 price tag, I could buy two Kindle Fire tablets and still have cash left over for downloading apps and movies. Fact Box Gadget Review: Amazon Kindle Fire

Features: 7-inch touchscreen, Android apps, multimedia content, cloud Web browser

Price: $199

Our Verdict: Not the most capable tablet on the market, but the price is pretty irresistable Kindle Fire: Better than iPad?

However, except for price the Kindle Fire falls short of the iPad in just about every category. The iPad's processor is faster; its software is more abundant, capable and polished; its storage space is larger; its screen is bigger; and its body is more slender.

Still, the Kindle Fire is a good Wi-Fi tablet, and the price is fantastic. After testing the device this week, I found the Kindle Fire is the most impressive iPad rival among the dozens of tablets that have flooded the market this year. Other iPad competitors have not sold well, but the new Kindle will likely have a different fate.

The Nook Tablet, which also came out this week but which I have not tested at length, costs $50 more and has weaker multimedia offerings. Amazon and Barnes & Noble are squaring off with a new line of inexpensive black-and-white e-readers, too. Yes, those are still around, and bookworms love them.

Size, components and features

Many tablets are much faster and have more bells and whistles than the Kindle Fire, which doesn't have cameras, GPS or a microphone. (The latter is especially strange because even the year-old black-and-white Kindle has a microphone.) Unlike other tablets and e-readers, there also is no version of the Kindle Fire with cellular-data connectivity, meaning that would-be Web surfers are limited to areas with Wi-Fi.

Forgetting for a moment about the guts inside, the Kindle Fire does not feel cheap. The back is rubbery and doesn't slip out of my hands. It's not ultra thin, but it's girth and weight makes it comfortable to hold for long periods of time, like a paperback book.

Because the Kindle is significantly smaller than the iPad -- with a 7-inch-wide screen versus the iPad's 9.7-inch more boxy display -- it weighs about a third less. The built-in speakers sound OK and get about as loud as an alarm clock. There is also a place to plug in headphones. The Kindle Fire has a rubbery backside that's not slippery. The Kindle Fire has a rubbery backside that's not slippery.

But the Kindle's battery loses a charger much faster than the iPad. I was able to surf the Web and play videos for several hours, but I found myself frequently searching for a charger after that.

That Amazon skimped on some of the components becomes evident when swiping through menus, switching the screen's orientation or playing games, which can all be jerky at times. The split-second delays are even present when turning pages on a Kindle e-book, which should be the pride of an Amazon device. The lack of a microphone means no Skype or other Internet telephony programs.

Browser and OS

Amazon's Silk Web browser has the features I'd expect and can play most videos found online. Amazon touts the browser's unique speed enhancements, but probably due to the device's lower-end components, it doesn't show. Web pages generally take a few seconds longer to load than on computers or other tablets. Also, I am somewhat uncomfortable with the idea that Silk, as a means of speeding up load times, sends information from every page I visit to Amazon's servers.

This Kindle's operating system is based on Google's Android, but Amazon has changed it so extensively that I barely noticed the similarities. A setback to this approach is that Amazon did not include some basic features, like the ability to copy and paste text, or to quickly switch between running applications.

But overall, the interface is attractive and neatly laid out. On the home screen, the top bar allows me to search for content on the device or search the Web with Google. Below that is a list of categories like news, books, music and apps. In the main area, I have a bookshelf that includes recently opened items or apps organized in a carousel, plus other shelves full of my favorites.

Movies and e-books

Amazon's multimedia offerings are pretty extensive and have been available on other platforms for some time. The company runs the biggest e-bookstore and the second-biggest music download store. Many publishers offer their newspapers and magazines in the Kindle newsstand, but the Kindle Fire's small screen size is not ideal for reading, say, an issue of Bloomberg Businessweek or the New York Times front page. Amazon has a catalog of 13,000 movies and TV shows ready to stream with an annual subscription. Amazon has a catalog of 13,000 movies and TV shows ready to stream with an annual subscription.

The built-in Amazon shopping app is well designed. Each Kindle Fire comes with a free 30-day subscription to Amazon Prime, whose primary perk (for $79 a year) is free two-day shipping on every item the company sells. The Prime membership also gives new Kindle Fire owners a taste of its Instant Videos service, which has 13,000 movies and TV shows available for streaming on demand. Tens of thousands more are available for purchase.

For those who prefer Netflix, that company released a new version this week for the Kindle Fire and other Android tablets.

But overall, Amazon's Appstore carries far fewer apps than Apple's online store and even Google's own Android Market. Developers are required to list their Android apps separately with Amazon. (Yes, the Kindle Fire does have "Angry Birds.")

A few bugs

The bare-bones e-mail client that comes with the Kindle Fire does not support Microsoft Exchange, which many companies use for their e-mail system. The app encourages users to download another e-mail program from the Appstore, but it doesn't specify which one to get. Holding the tablet upright and typing with my thumbs is fairly efficient, but the system occasionally doesn't register my taps right away if I type fast.

I also ran into several bugs throughout the Kindle's software. Sometimes my Fire would crash for no reason, and other times, images would not show up in the gallery. Some third-party developers apparently did not account for Amazon not including volume buttons on the hardware, and so I had to adjust the volume from the settings menu activated by tapping the menu bar. These are issues that I expect will get fixed over time through software updates.

The bottom line

The overall software experience is pleasant and integrated from top to bottom. I am never asked to punch in my credit card to buy things, which is convenient. When I first turned on the Kindle Fire, the software recognized who I am because it was already tied to my Amazon account.

After a few clicks, I was set up without ever connecting to a computer to synchronize anything. The music I bought through the Amazon MP3 store and the books I've gotten through the Kindle Store were all ready to go.

The iPad remains the superior tablet, and it's the closest I've found to replacing a laptop. But I wouldn't discount a less capable competitor. The Kindle Fire is a good entertainment device at a price that's truly unbelievable.


Poster Comment:

Anyone considering getting one of these?

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: A K A Stone (#0)

I'm buying my 15 year old daughter an HTC Flyer for Christmas.

She wants a tablet. HTC is my biggest customer. It's an easy decision.


In general, the art of government consists of taking as much money as possible from one party of the citizens to give to the other. - Voltaire (1764)

jwpegler  posted on  2011-11-19   21:22:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com