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.
Abstract: The Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet are both vying for that special place in consumers' hearts reserved for inexpensive consumption devices. But neither is perfect, and in many aspects of the tablet experience, one succeeds while the other fails. Since w...
The Kindle Fire is probably the best tablet you can buy at $199. Amazon has effectively defined the new price point and specs for entry level tablets, anything comparable shouldn't even bother with a price tag greater than $199. I'm sure this won't come a...
Abstract: TOOLS YOU CAN USE advertisementAmazon and Barnes and Noble are no strangers to one another, as both companies have been competing for some time now. The two have duked it out over who has the best online book and e-book selection, and have also gone he...
It's not difficult to understand why Amazon would want its own tablet. The company's list of services is just as long as Apple's. The garden is there, and now, Amazon has a device that can help build a wall around it. Digitimes has been speculating that t...
My out of the box experience with the Kindle Fire was not as good as I had expected. Sure, the very initial setup was a breeze, since it logged in my Amazon account automatically (which it won't do with devices bought at retail stores or ordered from ...
The Amazon Kindle Fire is a good, but not great device for reading books, watching movies, playing games, and surfing the web. But for $200, you’d be hard pressed to find a better device.The Barnes & Noble NOOK Tablet for just $50 more, and that tablet...
Abstract: Amazon has been a leader in the eBook reader space since it first introduced the Kindle eReader in November 2007. At that point in time, the Kindle had a 6-inch E Ink display that supported just four shades of gray, it included 250MB of storage that co...
Abstract: In the latest soldier to be unleashed on the battlefield of the Tablet Wars is Amazon’s newest generation tablet, the Kindle Fire. But can a $200 mini-tablet take on Apple's iPad 2? The Android-powered, 7-inch device didn't exactly strike me as a produ...
Gorgeous screen, Strong multimedia playback, Mostly snappy performance, Good price for its functionality
Oversimplified interface feels cluttered and more limiting than liberating, Taps often register as swipes, Storage space is tight, No memory-card slot
The Kindle Fire is a fine media-consumption device for the price, if not quite a full-fledged tablet. It's not as polished as we'd like, but if you know what you're getting and don't expect an iPad competitor, you won't be disappointed. ...