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.
The 7-inch screen on the Kindle Fire is impressive. It's sharp enough to do justice to web pages and photographs, and it also offers decent viewing angles. The Kindle Fire's web browser is more than capable, and everything responds at a decent pace. We managed to get 7-8 hours of runtime from a single charge. The Menus on the Kindle Fire are all laid out sensibly – the Fire runs a reskinned versi
That's unfortunately where the good news ends. For a start, the Kindle Fire will not be coming to the UK – and is on sale in the US only. The Kindle Fire is also less capable than the standard Kindle when it comes to use as a regular eReader, with the display proving harder on the eye. The 8GB of storage space is limited, and there are virtually no features – from a camera, to 3G, to a decent cho
The Amazon Kindle Fire is no Apple iPad replacement then, but it doesn't try to be. If you just want a way of immersing yourself in the Amazon eco-system, it's worth a look, but we suspect there will be more fully-featured models joining the Fire in th...
The Kindle Fire is a nice-looking tablet, and, at 200 bucks, Amazon is going to sell a shedload of them. Its flaws are well balanced by the low price, and it's a logical upgrade if you're already a Kindle owner and you want to buy videos, music and ap...
Abstract: A low price is earning Amazon's Kindle Fire a lot of press. We take a fine-tooth comb to this new tablet and turn up some surprising results. While there's a lot to like, there are also plenty of quirks. We go over the good, the bad, and the ugly. When...
Great price, Excellent custom UI, Price-defying build quality, Great new browser, iTunes-matching content, Surprising display quality
Poor quality speakers, Silk browser privacy concerns, No cameras, No mic, No GPS or Bluetooth, Performance niggles, No Android Market, Only 8GB storage, No expansion
The Amazon Kindle Fire lives up to the hype and delivers more. It's by no mean perfect and there's a laundry list of missing features, but at £125, it's better value for money than any Android tablet and a viable alternative to the iPad...
Published: 2011-11-14, Author: Chris , review by: reviewed.com
Abstract: The long-awaited Amazon Kindle Fire is here. With decent hardware that has some cost-cutting shortcuts, the Fire grants access to the wonderful media streaming platform of a tablet to buyers on a budget. In a race to the bottom for pricing on these machin...
Abstract: 29 September, 2011 by Gareth Halfacree Amazon has finally collapsed the waveform and declared its intentions to compete head-on with the likes of the iPad in the tablet market with the Kindle Fire, a new entry in the company's highly successful Kindle...
In many ways, the Amazon Kindle Fire isn't trying to beat the iPad or the Android-tablet masses at their own game. The Kindle Fire is doing its own thing, and going after a totally different audience. ...
Published: 2011-09-01, Author: Chris , review by: T3.com
Incredible pricepoint, Intuitive, innovative UI, Surprisingly good display
No Android Market, Slow performance, No UK availability
When reviewing the Amazon Kindle Fire we found ourselves constantly revisiting the price point and, with that firmly in mind, were probably willing to cut it more slack than we might have had it cost the same as the Motorola Xoom, or Samsung Galaxy Ta