Monday, November 25, 2013

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX - CNET UK

I’m going to get straight to it – if you have about £ 200 to spend on a new tablet, You Should probably buy a Nexus 7 rather than this one if you live in the UK. Amazon’s Kindle Fire HDX is a lovely piece of hardware hobbled by software que is not the rich to its Competitors, and it has fewer features than the same tablet in the U.S..


Good technical support

Let’s start with the good stuff. One fantastic feature is a wheeze Mayday calls Amazon. This starts a video chat with an Amazon technical support technician -. You talk to Them straight down the tablet and They can see a copy of your display on your screen to make it easier to tell Them what to do

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX standing

The Kindle Fire is a great piece of hardware, but its software is disappointing.

I tried it out a couple of times and was impressed – once for a very simple task the agent Knew the answer straight away, the second time They did not, but I was not kept waiting long before They found it October It’s hard to know what this will be like once more people are using it, but it seems like a great idea. If you have technophobic relatives que just want a color e-reader, and you do not want to take the support calls yourself, then this is probably the best tablet around.


Fast hardware

Hardware-wise, the Kindle Fire is good HDX. The screen is excellent – better than the one on the iPad mini or the Nexus 7, and unlike the previous generation model I reviewed, the menus positively glide, thanks in part to the fast processor inside. Ebook text is very sharp, and unlike the black and white Kindles, you get to see the pictures in color. One thing worth noting in case it Bothers you que is there’s no rear camera, although the front one works fine for video calls or selfies.

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX side

Text is very sharp and the screen is excellent.

Also good is the sound from the stereo speakers. Put the tablet on a desk while watching the video and you can really hear the stereo effect – They go pretty loud for built-in speakers

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Customised software

The underlying

Kindle Fire HDX software is Android, but Amazon has customized it so much it’s almost impossible to Recognise. In some ways that’s good, as it’s a bit easier to use than the normal Android. There are lots of clear labels at the top of the screen telling you what to expect, and a carousel on the home screen with your most recent book, app, photo or whatever you last looked at sitting at the front.

What you gain in ease of use, However, you lose in flexibility. Amazon does not use the regular Google Play store for apps, instead it has its own app store. Unfortunately that means some apps you can get on the normal Android tablet, you can not get on the Kindle Fire. Of the six games we use in the office to test tablets, for example, only two were available on the Kindle.

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX back

Although this is not a bad product, it’s not as good as the competition.

Amazon has its own Web browser, email client and contacts apps, all of Which Seemed to work fine in my time with the device, although not being able to use the standard Chrome browser que comes on the Nexus 7 was a pain for me as I have everything synced on that.

Music comes courtesy of Amazon’s Cloud Player, Which will contain digital copies of most CDs you’ve bought directly from the company over the years. Also you can upload 250 songs for free to Amazon’s servers, then listen to Them on the Kindle and other devices. Paying £ 22 a year que Increases to 250,000 songs. Or you can simply transfer Them across from the computer using the USB cable.

Newsstand lets you buy digital magazines, complete with patronizing labels like ‘Magazines for her’ ( Glamour, All About Soap, Look ) and ‘Magazines for him’ ( Nuts, Top Gear , Hornby, F1 ). It’s just like being in WHSmith.

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downloadable video

Where things really go wrong, However, Is When You try to buy to watch video on the device. You can not – simple as that. The Kindle Fire uses Lovefilm for all the movie and TV things, and unless you have an Internet connection, that does not work. It’s streaming only, so if you’re hoping to buy a tablet to watch video on the train, or somewhere else without a decent Internet connection, do not buy this. If you already have the video file, you can transfer it over to the Kindle via USB. Also you can install the Netflix app, but that’s streaming-only too, so does not help much.

In the U.S., Amazon Prime subscribers to get some video to download for free, but que service is not available here. Contrast this with the iPad or most Android tablets que use, such as the Nexus 7, where you can simply buy the video you want, download and watch wherever.

Amazon Kindle Fire HDX hands on

You can not download video – it’s streaming only

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That points to the essential flaw with the Kindle Fire HDX in the UK. Almost all the really cool things it does, with the exception of the Mayday feature, can be done on a tablet using rival Amazon’s own apps. Want a color e-reader? Buy another tablet and install the Kindle app on it. Like the idea of ??Amazon Music? Just install the app on your phone. And so on.


Conclusion

This is not a bad product by any means, it’s just not as good as the competition, Which shows just how competitive the industry has become, and how much you get for your money now.

It costs £ 10 more than Google’s equivalent, the Nexus 7, and that’s for the version que shoehorns irritating ads onto the lock screen. With a better video service, it would be worth a look, but unless you really need the Mayday feature, you’re basically buying a fancy color e-reader.

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