Testseek.com have collected 168 expert reviews of the Amazon Kindle Fire and the average rating is 71%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Amazon Kindle Fire.
(71%)
168 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: As usual, though, Amazon did not provide any actual sales figures. The company has not announced Australian availability.The Kindle Fire has an 18-centimetre screen, smaller than the iPad's 24cm, connects to the web using wi-fi and is powered by Google's ...
The Kindle Fire is one of a kind, at least this week. It's the first affordable, easy-to-use general-purpose tablet. It doesn't replace the Apple iPad: It complements the iPad, which is bigger, more powerful, more expensive, and has far more apps. Whil...
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(80%)
Published: 2011-11-14, Author: Tim , review by: engadget.com
Incredible price, Very solid construction, Easy access to lots and lots of premium media
Middling performance, No Android Market access, Occasionally clumsy interface
Amazon's first tablet can't quite match the experience of the competition, but for half the price it doesn't have to....
Solid, compact design, Slick and easy-to-use interface, Easy access to lots of content and apps, Free video and books for Amazon Prime members, Very affordable, Loud speakers
No dedicated volume controls, 8GB of memory not expandable, Occasionally buggy, sluggish performance, Skimpy parental controls
Published: 2011-11-14, Author: Donald , review by: cnet.com
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 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 limited parental cont
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.
Creative Commons licensed under BYNC, See Also, Amazon's Fire Tablet Already Challenging the iPad for Hearts & Minds: Survey, How the Kindle Fire Could Make 7Inch Tablets Huge, First Look: Up Close and Personal With Amazon's Kindle Fire, Tablet Wars: W
Small screen size and insufficient processing power. Crap browser performance. Near useless as a magazine reader, and roundly trumped by superb eink Kindles as a book reader
Abstract: The Kindle Fire, due for release tomorrow, landed in our hands today. As we work on our comprehensive review, we wanted to share our initial impressions. So we unboxed the tablet-like device and skimmed through our collections of Kindle material, bro...
Published: 2011-11-14, Author: Sam , review by: gizmodo.com
Reading, watching, browsing, and listening on the Fire are all tremendous, easy fun. Books, even very long ones, spring open quickly; page turning is, most of the time, very responsive. Typeface settings allow a variety of visual tweaks to set each page t
I said the Fire is very responsive, most of the time. Most of the time, yes. But when it's not, it's awful. There's absolutely no excuse for a machine with these guts to be unable to turn pages with zero lag. It has two cores, for Chrissake. What are they
If you like what Amazon Prime has going on in the kitchen, the Fire is a terrific seat. Its not as powerful or capable as an iPad, but its also a sliver of the price—and that $200 will let you jack into the Prime catalog (and the rest of your media coll...