What's your opinion on the Kindle Fire?

DebMcDonald

DIS Veteran
Joined
Aug 26, 2004
Messages
2,305
I was thinking about getting the Ipad for my husband for x-mas, we are a huge MAC family, but for the price of the Fire of am thinking of that instead. I think it's major function for my husband would be his fantasy football games...LOL

I figure worse case we give it to the kids if we hate it.
 
It looks awesome, and think once Amazon sets up it's full app store, it'll probably be pretty comparable to the other upper-level 7" tablets out there (and much cheaper).

BUT, it does not have a camera.. and that is one of the main reasons I am still going to go with the Touch for dd's Christmas gift (other reason, it's 7" which isn't super portable).

If it had a camera, I would've definitely leaped on it... just feel like she's going to have way too much fun doing pictures and videos with the Touch, as well as all the other apps available.
 
The Fire will use only Amazon for aps, music, and books - Amazon has GREAT customer service

The Ipad uses itunes for the same -

The fire is only 7" - no camera, no sd slot, some confusion (it hasnt come out till Nov) about the usb port and flash drives

the ipad has a camera and a 9" screen - and you can use the phone to iphone (not sure if it can use skype, but my dad and my niece talk fact to face, dad on his iphone 4, niece on her ipad)

Ipad you can get an ap for nook and kindle - to download and read books on
Fire - only Amazon

I've been reading on the amazon discussion board for kindle - and also kindleboards.com

I have a kindle, love it - but not sold on the Fire, I am sold on the price $199 is a great price, I'd love an ipad, but not for $$$...
 
Memory. The Fire only has 8 gigs and that isn't much when you start putting movies and music on it. Amazon wants you to use that storage service they have. Don't care for that since you can't access it without having wifi and I can think of a lot of times you could be without wifi and want something off that server.
 

Memory. The Fire only has 8 gigs and that isn't much when you start putting movies and music on it. Amazon wants you to use that storage service they have. Don't care for that since you can't access it without having wifi and I can think of a lot of times you could be without wifi and want something off that server.

We have an iPad with 3G (unlimited). We often find we use the 3G in public places where WiFi is painfully slow (like MCO).
And then there was the time our home internet went out, more or less for about a month, before we gave up and switched providers. We were very grateful that 3G was an option on our iPad during that time. Of course, we do not have tethering capabilities which would allow us to generate a WiFi signal from our cell phone. If you have that, 3G may not matter to you. -- Suzanne
 
Just read an article Q&A:

source:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2016348867_brieramazonqa29.html

Q: Are there any ports on the device beside the USB for charging?

A: Just the USB. There's also a headphone jack.

Q: Can you load your own files through the USB?

A: Yes, you can connect it to a PC. We don't think people are going to do it very often; we haven't optimized for that use. But if you plug it in to a PC or Mac, folders will show up and you can drag files onto it.

Q: Can you play media purchased elsewhere on the Fire?

A: Sure, I uploaded my entire iTunes library. It's got to be DRM [digital rights management] free. ... I moved it to the cloud and then it's all visible on the device.

Q: Does it support EPub or other book formats besides Amazon's?

A: We don't support that. We think our book selection and magazine selection are broad. It does support a great new PDF engine. The PDF reader is great - [a] desktop-class PDF reader.

Q: Can you view photos on the device?

A: There is a gallery app that comes with it but it's not something set up to show [yet].

Q: Is it a multitouch display, and how many fingers does it track?

A: It's a two-finger multitouch.

Q: How will the Fire do head-to-head against the iPad this holiday season?

A: I'm not sure it's a head-to-head device. [At] $500-plus, where other tablets have been, I think people make different decisions than for products that are $199. We'll have to see. At the end of the day, customers will tell us if they love it, and we hope they do.

Q: Will you release other models with bigger screens next year?

A: I'm not going to speculate about what's going to come out next.

Q: Does the browser support plug-ins?

A: Nope, no plug-ins.

Q: Why no camera?

A: We think most people tend to carry around a smartphone of some type with them today. Most of those have great cameras. To get to these price points, that was one of those trade-offs we were willing to make to get to $199.

Q: So communication isn't a primary use - it's more consumption?

A: It comes with mail ... but certainly the primary function - the one we've optimized it for - is media consumption.

Q: Will the browser be available on other platforms?

A: Not right now.

Q: What is battery life like on the Fire?

A: I like to start with the worst-case scenario: If you got on a plane, no Wi-Fi, and you wanted to watch movies straight through. You're going to get up to seven hours [of battery life]. If you do more mixed use - reading, movies, those types of things - you'll get up to eight hours.

Q: Will the Fire be used for productivity purposes. Will there be productivity apps? Or just media and entertainment?

A: We have a mail app and the mail app will treat enclosures as first-class citizens so you can open up Word documents and Excel documents. But front and center, the primary thing is to make sure you organize around your media properties.

Q: Will people eventually decide to use one of these and a desktop computer? Will the Fire fill the role of portable computing?

A: I think a lot of people are going to buy one of each of these devices. They fill very different needs in my life. I watch my movies and read magazines on this [Fire] because it's such an amazing experience.

But then, when I sit down and want to read a novel, I take out my Kindle 3G. At $199 and $79 you can buy two of these and it's still lower cost than other people's first device.

Q: Is there a Hulu app for the device?

A: I haven't talked to Hulu. We have talked to Netflix, Pandora, Facebook and Twitter, and they all seem very enthusiastic to put an app on the device.

Q: Will developers have to revise apps to get them on the Fire?

A: In general, we think the compatibility will be great. That's one of the core reasons we picked Android under the covers.

Q: What are revenue-sharing and in-app purchasing terms for developers?

A: For Fire, over the next few days we will be revising those.

Q: Which version of Android is it, and is it upgradeable?

A: It's a Gingerbread-based Honeycomb variant of 2.3. People will get periodic updates of the software.
 












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