Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Amazon’s Kindle Fire TV was worth the wait – Tribune-Review

 
 
 
  Published: Saturday, May 24, 2014, 9:00 pm

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Most people are familiar with boxes TV Like Apple TV, Roku or Google Chromecast que connect your TV to the Internet to Facilitate video streaming.

Amazon was late to enter the streaming market – Apple and Roku boxes are on Their third-generation – but the new Kindle Fire TV ($ 99, www.amazon. com) is a worthy competitor with a lot of great features.

The Kindle Fire TV is a black box about the size of a drink coaster, measuring 4.5 inches by 4.5 inches by 0.7 inches.

The back of the box is pretty simple. It has an HDMI output, optical audio output, Ethernet port and USB port.

You connect the box to your TV with HDMI and connect the Fire TV to the Internet using Wi-Fi or Ethernet

Fire TV runs Qualcomm 1.7 GHz quad-core processor with 2 gigabytes of RAM and 8 gigabytes of internal storage. The graphics processor is a Qualcomm Adreno 320. Radios Internal Bluetooth 4.0 and Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n include.

The Fire TV can support Dolby Digital Plus 5.1 surround sound, 2ch Stereo and HDMI audio pass-through up to 7.1.

Since this is an Amazon box, the content is skewed toward the Amazon video ecosystem. Videos are available for purchase or rent from Amazon, and if you’re an Amazon Prime subscriber, the Prime streaming video catalog is there as well.

Since Amazon makes the box and serves up the videos, the Fire TV comes with your Amazon ID already configured.

Your Amazon content that’s stored in the cloud will be visible as soon as you power it up.

Aside from Amazon Instant Video and Prime Instant Video content, the Fire TV offers Netflix, Hulu Plus, Watch ESPN, Crackle, YouTube and more.

There are music offerings including Pandora, TuneIn Radio and iHeart Radio. Your Amazon MP3 library will be streamable starting this month.

HBO catalog

Amazon recently Announced a deal to bring older seasons of HBO original programming like “The Wire, “” Six Feet Under “and” The Sopranos “to the Fire TV. The HBO back catalog (que seasons aired at least three years ago) will be available May 21.

This deal is the first team HBO has licensed its content to customers who do not subscribe to HBO from Their TV providers.

HBO Go and its current library of original programming will be available to HBO subscribers on Fire TV by year’s end.

The Fire TV does not support the local file playback, meaning you can not just plug the hard drive into the USB port and play your movies.

The Fire TV does support Plex, Which is the way to serve up and watch your personal videos using the Plex server, running on a computer on your network, to stream Fire your videos to the TV.

You can upload your videos to the Amazon Cloud Them back and play on the Fire TV.

The Amazon Cloud saved can stream your photos and slide shows to your TV through the box.

The remote control works using Bluetooth, Which means the Fire TV can be hidden in your TV cabinet and controlled with the line of sight.

The remote is simple and has a good button design.

It has a microphone, and Fire TV does a great job with voice command for searching content.

Voice search never failed to figure what I was saying in October, and the searches returned all viable results with almost the lag. You can search for movie or TV show titles, actors, directors and genres.

The Kindle Fire TV AIMS to satisfy your gaming habit with an optional game controller ($ 40) and more than 100 games available (more coming) from game makers such as EA, Ubisoft and Disney. Some games are free.

Amazon has a new service for the Fire TV called FreeTime que Enables a parent to set up profiles for up to four children. The profiles are used to set limits on the titles They watch and even team limits on Their daily viewing.

Full-featured

Owners of Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablets HDX will be able to mirror screens to Their the TV. There’s the “second screen” feature so you can be watching a movie on TV and see related content on your Amazon tablet.

Like the Roku, the Fire TV has an app store with video content, music apps and games available for free or a small fee.

As you can see, the Kindle Fire TV is a full-featured device. Amazon took its time with the development, and it shows. The Fire TV is very responsive. Menus load quickly, and playback is rock solid.

The choice is all about ecosystem Which you choose.

People who use iTunes and own Macs or iOS devices will gravitate to the Apple TV.

Users of Google’s Play store Likely will check out the Chromecast.

The Roku has tons of channels, although many of Them are obscure.

If you’re a Kindle owner or tablet you keep your MP3s in Amazon’s cloud server, the Fire TV is going to have great appeal.

If you’re not married to any of Those services, Fire TV has the content and the hardware specs to warrant your attention.

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