Testseek.com have collected 202 expert reviews of the Amazon Kindle Fire HD 7 inch and the average rating is 73%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Amazon Kindle Fire HD 7 inch.
(73%)
202 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Gorgeous screen, Very easy to use, Budget price with 16GB of storage
Rigidly locked to the Amazon ecosystem, Other tablets have more apps, Somewhat sluggish at times
In the end, we can still recommend the Kindle Fire HD, as the slate has a lot going for it. If you want an easy-to-use media consumption tablet, the Fire HD will certainly keep you entertained. The excellent 7in display and potentially boosted Wi-Fi perf...
New physical design and updated user interface make for a more refined overall experience. Audio Whispersync and XRay for Books and Video make watching, listening and reading that much more enjoyable. Beautiful screen. Good speakers. HDMI out for mirroring on a TV. Battery lasts about 10 hours,
Silk browser still needs work. No quick app switching. No default camera app. Email, calendar and contacts feel like afterthoughts the emphasis here is clearly on consuming content, playing games and reading books, not advanced productivity.
Clearly satisfied with the success of last year's initial launch, it seems Amazon is now intent on building up the Kindle Fire HD to make it the most compelling and feature-rich tablet you can buy for £159. Purists will still prefer something like the ...
Abstract: Lisa Gade compares the Kindle Fire HD 7″ and the Google Nexus 7 Android tablets. Check out the full review links for these two tablets.Check out our full video review of the Kindle HD 7″ at:Check out our full written review of the Kindle HD 7″...
Abstract: Lisa Gade reviews the Kindle Fire HD 7″ Android tablet from Amazon. The second generation LCD-based Kindle has a 1280 x 800 IPS display, a 1.2GHz dual core TI OMAP CPU and yoru choice of 16 or 32 gigs of storage. It also has HDMI out and a front video cha...
Abstract: The Amazon Kindle Fire HD tablets have started shipping today, so now's the perfect time to check out the new affordable lineup.At the second annual MediaTek Executive forum in London MediaTek gathered journalists and analysts to show them more about the...
Abstract: The Kindle Fire tablets are playing major role against its competitors. Users like Amazon products for the company’s planning and quality of features....
Great build quality, Good display, Solid performance, Above average battery life
No cellular connectivity, Awkward placement of power button
Amazon has priced the Kindle Fire HD at Rs. 15,999 that puts it directly in competition with the likes of Google's Nexus 7 and Asus's FonePad that carry identical price tags. All three tablets sport similar specs, but bring something different to the tabl...
Sharp and crisp 7-inch display, Good design and form factor, Intuitive Interface wrapped around Android, Unmatched e-book library, Amazon App Store is clean in terms of quality, Pre-registered with your Kindle account
Android fans will be disappointed, Every opened item adds to carousel, App Store still has some missing links, Power and volume keys are not designed very well
Before anyone gets confused and starts comparing this with the likes of the Google Nexus 7 and the other Android tablets out there, it is imperative to specify that this tablet is made to work in the Amazon ecosystem. While it may be Android at the very b...
Crisp screen, Excellent speakers, Good performance, Good battery backup, Excellent voice narrator, Access to huge book store.
Expensive, Doesn't support Google Play Store (only Amazon Appstore), Limited video format support, No 3G (only WiFi)
The Amazon Kindle Fire HD performs great as an e-book reader and also as a multimedia device. The crisp screen makes reading easy and the exclusive e-book reader features such as the amazing text-to-speech and X-Ray sets it apart from other Android table...
Abstract: Big screens are nice. But sometimes the extra real estate isn't worth the lack of portability. If tablets are considered mobile devices, they should be easy to take with you, right?That's the idea behind a new class of small tablets with screens measuring...