


#FEATURES OF KINDLE FIRE HD 8.9 ANDROID#
What's missing is the purer Android equivalent of a Recent Apps menu that lets you quickly switch between apps that are already open. This feature is a godsend, as it prevents users from having to return to the home screen.

#FEATURES OF KINDLE FIRE HD 8.9 WINDOWS#
Dickey's autobiography "Wherever I Wind Up," suggestions below included Jim Bouton's "Ball Four" and "Just a Minor Perspective" by Eric Pettis.īelow suggestions is a small star pressing on this reveals a windows with content or apps you have favorited, which can include anything on the tablet. For example, when the main icon was of R.A. (Additional categories show up when the tablet is held in landscape mode.) Below these is a carousel of recently viewed material, be it a book, app, movie, etc., which can quickly become tedious to scroll through.Ĭlick to EnlargeWhen the Fire HD 8.9 is in portrait mode, another row of icons runs along the bottom, suggesting related content that might interest you. The Home screen features a search bar at the top, with seven categories below: Shop, Games, Apps, Books, Music, Videos and Newsstand. Even for those who are comfortable with Android, Amazon's UI requires an adjustment period. The category average is 362 lux.Ĭlick to EnlargeLike the smaller Fire HD, the 8.9-inch version runs a heavily modified version of the Android operating system, which is designed primarily for showcasing Amazon content. The Fire HD 8.9's average brightness of 454 lux also trumped most of its competition, including the Nexus 10 (376 lux) and the iPad (386 lux), but not the Transformer Pad Infinity (642 lux). The same image on the Nexus 10 looked browner and duller. The Fire HD's colors were slightly more saturated, but weren't as vibrant. On the National Geographic Photo of the Day (a pheasant in Italy), colors seemed truest on the iPad - the greens of the grasses were accurate, and the reds of the poppies and the comb of the pheasant really popped. The Nexus 10 and the Fire HD were noticeably pixelated. When we zoomed all the way in on the Times' logo, it was only crisp on the iPad. When we viewed The New York Times on the Fire HD, Nexus 10, and the iPad, text was clearest on the iPad, followed by the Fire HD 8.9, and then the Nexus 10. The screen also features a polarizing filter and antiglare technology, so we could still see the action on-screen even when the Fire HD was tilted at oblique angles. We could make out every scratch in Iron Man's armor, as well as individual strands of Black Widow's red hair. A downloaded HD version of "The Avengers" (720p) looked outstanding. While not as high as the iPad (2048 x 1536) or the Nexus 10 (2560 x 1600 pixels), its resolution is the same as the ASUS Transformer Pad Infinity. Click to EnlargeThe showcase of the Fire HD is its 8.9-inch, 1920 x 1200 IPS display.
