First pic of the new Kindle Fire

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podspi

Golden Member
Jan 11, 2011
1,982
102
106
I'd only have any interest in the kindle 2 if it's cheaper than the nexus 7 (which i have already) and is easily hackable so that stock JB can be installed.

Yea, if it is hackable like the first Fire, depending on specs/price this could be really great.

I actually do use Amazon's ecosystem quite a bit, but the 3rd-party version of Android for the Fire are much better than Amazon's.
 

akshatp

Diamond Member
Oct 15, 1999
8,349
0
76
"That picture you guys posted is not the new Kindle Fire. I know because I have held the new Kindle Fire in my hand and played with it for extensive periods of time... the bezel on the new Kindle Fire is wider. It has sloping sides like the old Motorola Xoom, so it sits nicely in the hand."
 

jiffylube1024

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2002
7,430
0
71
Nexus 7 killed any interest I had in the new Fire. I don't buy digital content so Amazon ecosystem is a con rather than plus.

+1. Although I do buy Kindle and Audible content, this is just as easily bought using Android (or iOS) apps.

Amazon latest to snub Google Maps on mobile

Amazon.com Inc.’s new Kindle Fire will have mapping services via a tie-up with Nokia, according to two people familiar with the situation, filling a gap in the tablet’s capabilities while snubbing Google Inc.’s popular service.

Great so like Apple they will go with an inferior mapping system. That makes the Fire 2 a lot more appealing! :rolleyes:
 

Mopetar

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2011
8,469
7,697
136
Nexus 7 killed any interest I had in the new Fire. I don't buy digital content so Amazon ecosystem is a con rather than plus.

How does having a feature that you don't use at all put it in the 'con' category? It would be like saying, "I don't use Google Voice/Siri so that's a con."

Also, isn't much of Amazon's stuff also available for other Android devices? I guess I haven't looked into how Amazon's strategy and content availability differs between the Kindle Fire and other Android tablets. When it was first announced, I was most excited about the Silk browser, but that really didn't amount to anything. If anyone else could tell me what the content difference is between the Fire and other Android tablets I'd be interested to know.
 

ponyo

Lifer
Feb 14, 2002
19,688
2,811
126
How does having a feature that you don't use at all put it in the 'con' category? It would be like saying, "I don't use Google Voice/Siri so that's a con."

Also, isn't much of Amazon's stuff also available for other Android devices? I guess I haven't looked into how Amazon's strategy and content availability differs between the Kindle Fire and other Android tablets. When it was first announced, I was most excited about the Silk browser, but that really didn't amount to anything. If anyone else could tell me what the content difference is between the Fire and other Android tablets I'd be interested to know.

Because Amazon Kindle Fire uses dated forked Android. Unless you're tied in to Amazon ecosystem and use their service, it's vastly inferior OS with limited functionality. I strongly prefer Google services, and unless you hack the tablet, it's not available. Even then it will be buggy with functionality missing or not working. Plus, I can't stand Amazon app store. There are limited apps and the apps that are available are slow to get updates. I have bunch of free paid apps from Amazon app store that I bought again on Google PlayStore just so I can uninstall Amazon app store app. And I'm not the only one. When people will pay money to rebuy the same app that they got for free on Amazon just so they can get away and cut ties with Amazon, that pretty much says it all.

I was interested in the original Kindle Fire because of the hardware and cheap price. I wanted to hack it and run pure Android. Nexus 7 has great hardware, cheap price, and runs latest pure Android with zero hacking involved. And it will receive latest updates immediately directly from Google server and everything will work. So how is the new Kindle Fire attractive to someone who doesn't like Amazon ecosystem and doesn't plan to use it? It's a con because I would have to deal with the hassle of removing it and waiting for buggy pure Android port.
 
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