With the Kindle Fire HD 8.9 comes the most well-rounded Amazon content delivery system youâve ever held in two hands â" but thatâs all it is. This device is being sold as exactly the device it was meant to be: the Amazon Vending Machine HD 8.9, and it takes its job seriously. If you could never bring yourself to pick up an iPad and the Apple-bound content environment that is iTunes, nor could you purchase a Nexus 7 or 10 as connected to Google Play, Amazon might be the third heat you were looking for.
Content Delivery System
Itâs a mistake to compare the Amazon Kindle Fire HD 8.9 to any other tablet on the market not inside the Kindle Fire family unless youâre a software developer, a hacker, or youâre just about to jump into the digital content arena and have never before purchased yourself a digital video. With the Kindle Fire HD 8.9, the iPad 4th generation (the one with the Lightning port thatâs in the store now), and the Google Nexus 10, youâve got extremely high definition displays, and itâs there you should start if youâre demanding to see the best hardware package.
But hereâs the thing: thereâs a massive amount of Android tablets on the market today, each of them able to access the whole of the Google Play store. Thereâs several iPad models in the lineâs history, and a set of rather similar Kindle Fire models tablets out there able to access the Amazon content system â" but Amazonâs system doesnât stop at the Kindle Fire. The only system that stops at the hardware (and vice versa) is the iPad.
What the Kindle Fire HD 8.9 does is place the Amazon content system directly at the center of a machine thatâs been checked and approved by Amazon itself. With that, itâs been limited to the Amazon content system so that you can be assured an experience that Amazon approves of â" Apple does that same thing with the iPad. The Kindle Fire HD 8.9 is indeed a fabulous place to access your Amazon content.
The connectivity on this device is wi-fi but a 4G LTE bit of AT&T mobile data is available from Amazon if you pick up the edition with that ability. The offer behind that LTE is interesting at $50 a year, but with a limit of 250MB of data a month â" this means youâll be able to use this device for email using that data, and if you start watching streaming content or downloading media, youâll go over in no time at all. Watch the overage costs rack up and that smile will turn upside down real quick.
Hardware
The display is extremely nice, bringing on a resolution of 1920 x 1200 pixels over 8.9 inches, that being 254ppi. Thatâs less than the iPad 4 and less than the Nexus 10, but up at this resolution weâre not able to tell the difference without getting up real, real close â" closer than weâd get on any normal day, thatâs for sure.
Colors are reproduced extremely accurately and with the darks on this machine being as deep as they are, weâve been using this machine as a content machine via the miniHDMI as a top pick. Downloading an HD video from Amazonâs collection and playing it on the device or through the microHDMI port to an HDTV makes for a massively impressive experience â" amongst the best on the market if not straight up the best there is with a wire.
The speakers on the Kindle Fire HD 8.9 are Dolby powered and stereo â" bringing on two channels for real. The speakers on this device are loud enough that youâll not want to be a room away from a sleeping baby when them turned all the way up â" youâll wake that baby up. Itâs unfortunate that theyâre facing backwards as most of the tablet universe still has them aiming, but holding the tablet with two hands has the sound bouncing off your palms â" thatâs good enough for most.
Battery life on this device is rather good, especially since youâre only working with wi-fi connectivity at this time. LTE might make you bust down a bit quicker when it comes around, but for now youâve got a couple of days at least with daily usage as a game-player and TV show downloader/watcher. Chatting on Skype (which is, mind you, generally OK but certainly not the nicest Skype experience on the market by a long shot due to less-than-perfect video quality) will drain your battery quickest.
Thereâs also a rather nice case/cover that youâll probably want to pick up from Amazon if/when you purchase the Kindle Fire HD 8.9. Itâs made by Amazon and looks like what youâre seeing above, complete with a magnetic âsmartâ off/on function (as the Kindle Fire HD 8.9 does indeed have that sensor) and has a rubbery bumper that allows it to stand up like youâre seeing here too.
Performance
With the processor mentioned above youâve got a suitable environment in which you can play most if not all of the most high-powered games on the market. What youâll see in the video below is Asphalt 7, a racing game, opened and tested in a real basic way just so you can see how quick everything renders out and responds â" just as nice as the nicest devices on the market today.
Weâve heard of some people having small problems with the user interface and non-immediate opening of apps and switching between screens, but any such problems were negligible from our perspective. This is a high-quality device and Amazon has created a user interface over the top of Android that should do the original creators proud.
Youâve got a processor from Texas Instruments thatâs one of the rarest on the market today, the OMAP4470 dual-core used only on the Nook HD family, Samsung Galaxy Premier, the BlackBerry Dev Alpha B, and a variety of oddities. This processor works perfectly well for this device, comparing in performance with the other dual-core processor on them market in a very general sense to the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 dual-core processor weâve seen on a large number of smartphones this year including the Galaxy S III and HTC One series.
The processing power here does not bring us as ultra-swift a system as weâre seeing on the Nexus 10 or the iPad 4th gen â" but the difference is invisible if youâre not using both one next to the other or doing extensive processor tests in a lab. Once youâve got it in the lab, on the other hand, youâll find the device ranking up on systems such as AnTuTu benchmark system with a score of 7247 â" nowhere near the quad-core competition.
Store Access
If youâre not planning on purchasing videos from Amazon, you donât want to use Amazonâs system for music, youâve got no intention of purchasing any ebooks from Amazon, and you donât want to use Amazonâs App Store, this is not the tablet for you. This unit is first and foremost a window into the Amazon library of digital content, and youâre going to have to pay for it.
The Amazon store exists at all corners in this device, and the different kinds of media youâre consuming here sit right up front and center. The first display you see on this device once youâve started it up is a giant set of icons in a side-scrolling gallery that says quite clearly âyouâre about to startâ rather than âwelcome to your Amazon tablet.â If thereâs a scale from tablet interfaces that goes from standard computer to window, it starts at Android, moves up to the iPad, and ends at the Amazon Kindle Fire â" this is not a device youâre going to use like your notebook or your desktop, itâs a consumption window.
X-Ray
Thereâs a brand overlay that exists between two different bits of in-content excellence that come with this device working with content from Amazon called X-Ray. This system works in videos as a direct connection to IMDB, showing the actors that are working in essentially any given scene and with books showing keywords and connections to them throughout the story youâre reading â" find all the Ali Babas in the story and link in to them with ease.
This system works with a lovely collection of ebooks and videos coming from Amazon â" not every single piece of content coming from Amazon, but certainly enough to warrant calling it a great selling point for this tablet. Weâre always wondering who the heck that guy is getting his face cut off by the monster in the horror film scene weâre watching â" now we know!
Kindle FreeTime
The folks at Amazon have come up with an extremely simple home screen replacement app that brings forth an environment for your kids. This environment is created by you, the parent, and is so simple that you canât mess it up. You open up Kindle FreeTime and select the profile you want, deciding there what settings you want your child to work with and what apps/media theyâre going to be able to see, and bang, youâre done.
From there the person in that profile â" child or not â" needs a password to exit again. Thatâs so simple that we wish Amazon would release FreeTime for the Google Play app store â" please? Pretty please? For now youâll need a Kindle Fire to use Kindle FreeTime â" and for some parents that might be a deal-maker.
Wrap-up
If youâre deeply invested in the Amazon universe for content, this device is the best content delivery system youâre going to be able to buy today. Itâs the biggest tablet Amazon makes at the moment and gives you access to all of your Amazon-held content in high definition, top to bottom. Itâs not an Android tablet (as far as the Google Play store is concerned), itâs not an iPad, and itâs not a Windows device. Itâs a unique tablet thatâs deeply engrained in the Android environment.
The price of this device in its wi-fi configuration â" that being the one weâre looking at here in this review â" is $299 USD, and for that price thereâs no competition unless you want a smaller display and a different content environment. For Amazon users, thereâs nothing else â" unless of course you consider the smaller version: see our Kindle Fire HD 7 full review as well.
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