You wait a year for an Amazon Kindle Fire (see our Kindle Fire
review) to make its way to the UK, then two come along at once, with
the greatly enhanced Amazon Kindle Fire HD arriving at the same time as
its predecessor.
We'll say this from the off: now that the Amazon
Kindle Fire HD is here, the original Kindle Fire seems somewhat surplus
to requirement.
Far more interesting, though, is the intense external rivalry presented by the Google Nexus 7 and the iPad mini.
Starting from just $199, and offering a 7-inch HD display and a
1.2GHz dual-core CPU, the Amazon Kindle Fire HD appears to offer great
value for money.
But it also needs to offer a stand-alone tablet
experience that's capable of matching - or even surpassing - its
illustrious rivals.
The Amazon Kindle Fire HD certainly matches the Nexus 7 in terms of
price and raw hardware, and it comfortably trumps the iPad mini on price
and screen resolution.
But, as we've come to realise, Apple's
dominance in the tablet market has been built on strong design, coupled
with a peerless content ecosystem and a super-slick UI.
The Amazon Kindle Fire HD may be cheap, but ultimately it will still
need to embrace all three of these key elements if it's to succeed.
If
you still think of Amazon Kindles as those little monochrome holiday
companions, then you should know that the Amazon Kindle Fire HD is a
completely different beast.
Rather than focusing on the very
specific job of downloading and reading electronic books, this is an
all-purpose tablet that acts as a window onto Amazon's wider multimedia
world - films, music, apps and games are all included in the Kindle Fire
HD's remit.
With that in mind, the Amazon Kindle Fire HD is a much simpler, purer design than the original Kindle.
The
emphasis here is on the screen first and foremost, with the only
hardware controls coming in the shape of some weedy and
difficult-to-locate volume and power buttons on top of the device, right
alongside its 3.5mm headphone jack.
The lack of a fixed home key adds to that minimalistic vibe (we'll
discuss the effect that has on usability later). The only detail on the
front of the device is a 1.3-megapixel camera for video calls - there's
no rear-mounted camera here.
Despite that impossibly cheap price
point, the Amazon Kindle Fire HD doesn't feel like a cheap device. It's
solid in the hand, with none of the creak you find in many budget
Android tablets.
There's a nice contrast between the Amazon Kindle
Fire HD's smooth, glass front and its grippy matte back. It's quietly
pleasing from a tactile perspective, even though it lacks the sheer
machined precision and premium feel of Apple's tablets.
While Apple has opted for a super-slim bezel for its iPad mini -
partly to facilitate that wider 7.9-inch display - Amazon has been more
generous with its own offering.
Indeed, the thick border around
the smaller 7-inch screen brings it closer to the full-sized iPad in
design than its miniature brother.
We like this approach from a purely practical perspective (it actually makes it look a little chubby, if we're honest).
It's
still comfier to hold the Amazon Kindle Fire between your thumb and
fingers than it is to rest it in the span of your hand, even when held
in portrait view. Of course, that's partly because it's slightly chunky
for its size - at 395g it's almost 90g heavier than the iPad mini.
One
area in which Amazon would hope to gain a big advantage with the Amazon
Kindle Fire HD over its rivals is with its display. As we've mentioned,
we're talking about a 7-incher here, but it's the quality of that
screen that's causing Amazon to boast.
The company claims that the display features a polarising filter and
anti-glare technology, which apparently boosts colour and contrast, as
well as improving viewing angles.
Despite such claims - not to
mention early positive reports from the US - we have to admit to being
slightly underwhelmed by our initial experience with the Amazon Kindle
Fire HD display. It seems distinctly yellow to our eyes.
Of course, it could just be that we've been conditioned by Apple's slightly cooler, bluer high-definition displays.
Indeed,
once your eyes have grown accustomed to its warmer hue, you'll no doubt
begin to appreciate the Amazon Kindle Fire HD display's more
naturalistic colour contrast - particularly when viewing video content.
It's certainly richer than the somewhat washed-out and dim Nexus 7
screen.
That's only half the story with the Kindle Fire HD
display, too. The clue is in the name - that 7-inch display is sharp.
It's high-definition-sharp. In fact, with a resolution of 1280x800 and a
pixel density of 216ppi, it's considerably sharper than the iPad mini
equivalent.
This isn't particularly apparent within the main Kindle Fire
interface, but it certainly bears fruit when reading a book or browsing
the internet, where small text remains clear and eminently readable.
This
display is powered by a capable 1.2GHz dual-core TI OMAP 4460 CPU.
While this is far from the most powerful processor on the market, it is
very well balanced and certainly doesn't come up short when faced with
demanding tasks like high-definition video and 3D games.
One final
piece of hardware-related info we really must cover is the Amazon
Kindle Fire HD's impressive speakers. Positioned on either side of the
device (if you're holding it in landscape), they're surprisingly punchy,
given their size.
They really do crank out some respectable stereo sound - both in terms of volume and clarity.
Naturally,
we'd recommend using earphones whenever possible, but for those times
where you're just following a quick email link to a YouTube video,
they're more than adequate.
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