Friday, December 13, 2013

Kindle Fire vs Kindle Fire HD comparison review

Kindle Fire vs Kindle Fire HD comparison review: Price
 The Fire originally cost £129, making it £30 cheaper than the Fire HD. This is now a moot point since you can't buy the Fire any more. Bear in mind that both tablets will display 'special offers' on the lock screen unless you opt for the version without them - this bumps the price by £10. If buying second hand, you might want to check if the original owner paid to remove the ads or not.
Some people might find these deals a handy way of grabbing a bargain, while others might be annoyed by them. We've heard reports of users complaining that their tablet turns on from standby to display these offers, although it didn't happen during our time with them.




Kindle Fire vs Kindle Fire HD: Design
 The Fire has thinner borders around the screen than the Fire HD, and looks less clunky and old fashioned. It still won't win any style awards, and it's not especially light at 400g - the same weight as the Fire HD, give or take.
The Fire measures 189 x 120 x 11.5mm, making it 17mm shorter and a fraction thicker. Its design is different to the Fire HD in that it's very similar to a traditional E-ink Kindle, and designed to be used in portrait mode.
Both speakers are at the top, with the power button on the bottom. On the Fire HD, the speakers are on either side in landscape mode, which is great for watching videos.
Oddly, the Fire has no physical volume buttons, which is an annoyance. Next to the power button is a micro USB connector for sync and charging, and a standard headphone jack.
Note that neither tablet comes with a mains charger - you have to buy this (the PowerFast) separately for £18 (although it was reduced to £9 when bought with the tablet at the time of writing). You can, of course, buy any USB charger which provides 5V at 1.8A.

Kindle Fire vs Kindle Fire HD: Screen
 For £119 (only £9 more than a Kindle Paperwhite), the Kindle Fire is a 7in tablet with an IPS (in-plane switching) screen. This is the same type as used in iPads and means vibrant colours and wide viewing angles. The Kindle Fire's screen also happens to have great contrast.
The 1024x600 resolution is better than most tablets at this price, but everything looks noticeably fuzzier than on the Kindle Fire HD's 1280x800 screen (and much worse than the Nook HD's fantastic 1440x900 display).
You particularly notice the lower resolution when browsing the web, but for reading books and watching videos, it's fine.
The other difference is that the Fire has only a two-point touchscreen, whereas the Fire HD can detect up to 10 fingers at once. This is of little consequence, though, since two fingers are all that's required for most things such as pinching to zoom.

Kindle Fire vs Kindle Fire HD: Storage
 This is one of the Kindle Fire's weak areas. There's only one model, and it has 8GB of storage. After the OS and other system files are accounted for, there's around 5.5GB for your own stuff: apps, books, music, movies and photos. That's not a lot, and there's no memory card slot for adding more.
You get free cloud storage for all the content you buy from Amazon but it's hardly convenient to have to delete apps and other media from your tablet because you've run out of space locally.
With the Fire HD, you have a choice of 16GB or 32GB. Again, the user storage is a few GB less in each case.

Kindle Fire vs Kindle Fire HD: Camera
 If Skype is a priority, don't buy the Kindle Fire - it has no camera at all. The Fire HD has a 1.3Mp front-facing camera which can also record 720p video (if you download a third-party app which has this capability).


please see other articles may be useful.........



No comments:

Post a Comment

Tips When Picking a Van

In the event that you depend on messenger work for your employment then your van will be the most vital instrument of your exchange. Vans a...