The Amazon Kindle Fire HDX is the new tablet from the company that arguably started the eReader craze with the original Kindle.
Since then Amazon has faced increasing rivalry, not least from the arrival of affordable, powerful Android tablets such as the new Google Nexus 7, and then of course there’s Apple’s own take, the iPad Mini Retina.
The Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 7 is a tablet that's incoming choppy waters. The 7 inch segment is getting crowded, but retail giant is playing smart: the HDX is a super-powerful device for not a lot a cash.
The specs are very impressive: a 2.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor is coupled with a 1920x1200 resolution display. That way you're looking at slick performance and a screen that has an eye-popping 323PPI pixel density.
In that location there's a dynamic image contrast feature, which one exec pulled out a flashlight to demo. The feature works by shifting the display's contrast, rather than brightness, to compensate for external changes in lighting. It's still not the perfect outdoor reading device some are hoping for, but, well, that's part of the reason the company's keeping its Kindle reader line around.
If you need more information about Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 7 hands on watch this video:
Since then Amazon has faced increasing rivalry, not least from the arrival of affordable, powerful Android tablets such as the new Google Nexus 7, and then of course there’s Apple’s own take, the iPad Mini Retina.
Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 7 hands on |
The Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 7 is a tablet that's incoming choppy waters. The 7 inch segment is getting crowded, but retail giant is playing smart: the HDX is a super-powerful device for not a lot a cash.
The specs are very impressive: a 2.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor is coupled with a 1920x1200 resolution display. That way you're looking at slick performance and a screen that has an eye-popping 323PPI pixel density.
In that location there's a dynamic image contrast feature, which one exec pulled out a flashlight to demo. The feature works by shifting the display's contrast, rather than brightness, to compensate for external changes in lighting. It's still not the perfect outdoor reading device some are hoping for, but, well, that's part of the reason the company's keeping its Kindle reader line around.
If you need more information about Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 7 hands on watch this video:
Amazon Kindle Fire HDX 7 hands on
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