The Kindle Fire HD vs Kindle Fire: What’s changed?

DNP  Kindle Fire 2 vs Kindle Fire What's changed

Well, Amazon unveiled a trio of tablets today, with last year’s champ elbowed out of the spotlight by the Kindle Fire HD with its beefier processor and display. While we’ll pour one out for the downgraded former flagship, we here at Engadget are more concerned with stacking the stats side-by-side to see what’s changed in the 12 months since were here last. If you’re curious yourself, why not join us after the break, but we warned, things are gonna get seriously nerdy.

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The Kindle Fire HD vs Kindle Fire: What’s changed? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon’s new Kindle line-up now available for pre-order

Amazon's new Kindle lineup now available for preorder

Well, that didn’t take too long. As promised, Amazon’s entire line-up of new Kindles is now available to order on the retailer’s site (in the US, at least), from the basic $69 Kindle to the top-end Kindle Fire HD 8.9 with 4G LTE. Of the lot, however, that $69 Kindle is the only one that’s actually in stock (despite the September 14th ship date quoted at the event). The rest are up for pre-order, with the Kindle Paperwhite and Paperwhite 3G (with or without Special Offers) both set to ship on October 1st, while the new $159 Kindle Fire and 16GB 7-inch Fire HD ship September 14th, and the Fire HD 8.9 (with or without LTE) ships November 20th. Those interested in the 7-inch Fire HD with 32GB of storage will have to wait until October 25th. And, in case you were wondering, you can also still order the Kindle Keyboard and Kindle DX at their regular prices.

Update: No word on the rest of the line-up, but Canadians can now at least order the updated basic Kindle, which runs $89 (sans Special Offers) and is set to start shipping on September 12th.

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Amazon’s new Kindle line-up now available for pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 16:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle Fire, meet Kindle Fire HD

Kindle Fire, meet Kindle Fire HD

Kindle Fire, meet the new hotness. The holiday shopping crowd may have fallen in love with Amazon’s tablet last year, but there’s a new Fire in town. We snuck a Fire into today’s Amazon event, and placed up next to the new model, the difference is clear: the Fire felt a bit OEMed and boxy, sort of a remake of the BlackBerry PlayBook, from a hardware perspective, at least. This is clearly not the case with the seven-inch HD — it really feels like a reasonably high-end tablet with an extremely nice price point. And what about the Kindle Touch versus the Kindle Paperwhite? The difference aren’t quite as extreme, but they’re definitely apparent. The new devoted e-reader from Amazon is an extremely well built device at first glance. Check out a picture of the two after the break.

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Kindle Fire, meet Kindle Fire HD originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 16:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Kindle Paperwhite hands-on (Update: video)

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite handson

Of course, today’s event wasn’t just about the Fires. Amazon’s still got a dog in the devoted e-reader race as well. The big news here, of course, is the company’s entry into the world of lighted E Ink readers — coming several months after the release of Barnes & Noble’s own Nook Simple Touch With GlowLight. The front-lit technology here is proprietary, of course. Amazon mentioned some four years in R&D on glowing alone. And the difference is pretty immediately clear: it’s all about distribution. Looking at the Nook for a second, you can immediately isolate the top as the light source, with a stronger concentration and somewhat even distribution. The Kindle’s light however, is hard to spot, thanks in part to a much thinner bezel: you can’t just angle the reader and see the lights here.

Hold the new Kindle up to the old and something else is immediately obvious: there’s a reason the company is calling this thing the Paperwhite. The contrast is like night and day here. That tinted display we’ve become accustomed to has been traded in for something much lighter, and the text is that much sharper. There’s a reason Amazon went hog wild with the font styles and sizes: they’re all visible here. Also, at first glance, there doesn’t seem to be any degradation in sharpness due to the addition of glow technology, which we saw in the new Nook.

The glow is quite bright, even with the lights on — we get Amazon’s point about wanting to keep it on at all times, so that increased battery life (eight weeks with the light on) is certainly a huge bonus here. We find ourselves turning it on and off a lot with the Nook — not here. Adjusting the light is also quite nice, with a dimmer switch that runs up and down and a whole lot of brightness levels.

The reader also just looks better. Physical buttons have been dropped altogether here (which is either a curse or a blessing, depending on who you ask) and the reader is a bit shorter and thinner than its predecessor. In place of the menu button is a white Kindle logo along the bottom bezel. The silver of the last version has been dropped for a matte black, which is really just nicer to look at, with a rubberized back that makes it harder for it to slip from your hands. Weight-wise, we’re talking roughly the same ballpark as the Kindle Touch. We still prefer the Nook’s trademark design for long-term reading — one of the downsides of a smaller bezel is that there’s less place for your fingers to go. And while there’s an indented Kindle logo on the back, we still prefer the Nook’s concave rear.

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Amazon Kindle Paperwhite hands-on (Update: video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 15:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle Fire HD 7-inch hands-on (Update: video)

Kindle Fire HD 7inch handson

As expected, the big news at today’s gadget-filled Amazon event is the successor to the Kindle Fire, which was launched in New York, roughly this time last year. It’s not the Fire 2, however — this is the Kindle Fire HD. It’s clear the minute you grab hold of it that Amazon wanted to start over with this device in a number of ways. There’s none of that OEM build quality from the first go-round. This is a nice, slim device that really feels as though it can stand up to some of the nicer Android tablets out there — we’d certainly put our initial impressions of build up there with the Nexus 7, which just happens to share the same screen size and 1280 x 800 resolution.

The corners of the tablet are more rounded than its predecessor, with a glossy bezel going around the display — a little bit of the rubberized backing creeps out on top of this. There are no buttons here, however. If you want to effect the screen, give it a tap and you get a small virtual menu on the side. As advertised, the display is quite vivid. Amazon talked up the decrease of glare, though it was a bit hard to tell just how successful the company was, given the fact that we’re indoors. The device has a matte rear, with that stereo speaker going down a line in a middle, vents on either side.

Performance-wise, this seemed pretty snappy running off a heavily-skinned version of Android 4.0, and we got the pre-loaded (at least on Amazon’s own tablet) Hunger Games movie to load quite quickly, thanks no doubt to all of the investment the company put into the WiFi side of this device. Interestingly, there was a little lag as we were flipping through the pages of a book, with the Fire doing a little loading every few pages or so.

Myriam Joire contributed to this report.

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Kindle Fire HD 7-inch hands-on (Update: video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 15:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon unveils Kindle FreeTime, gives kids their own space to play

Amazon unveils Kindle FreeTime, gives kids their own space to play

Amazon just solved one of the bigger dilemmas for parents buying that new Kindle Fire HD — how to keep the kids in a safe zone for content. It’s introducing Kindle FreeTime, a special mode that makes it easier for younguns to navigate while letting the adults create separate profiles dictating what children can access and for how long. The filters are separated by media type, and Amazon even turns the background from black to blue to reassure parents by the glow of the screen on Junior’s face. We’d call the parental control a long overdue feature, although we’re sure Amazon also sees it as a chance to scoop up an extra Kindle Fire sale or two among families.

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Amazon unveils Kindle FreeTime, gives kids their own space to play originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon announces X-Ray for Movies, a Kindle feature that uses IMDB to name the actors for you

Amazon announces XRay for movies, a Kindle feature that names the actors for you

Amazon is on a roll at its Kindle press event today, unveiling tons of new hardware, but it’s also got some software tricks up its sleeve too: the company just announced X-Ray for Movies, a feature that uses the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) to name the actors for you. As you might know, Amazon already offers X-Ray for books, but this is the first time you can use the feature to get more information about films. To active X-Ray, just pause whatever you’re watching and you’ll see things like actor bios, a cast list and links to other titles (which you can purchase, natch). All told, not exactly a novel idea, but for Amazon, at least, it’s a logical extension for X-Ray. Look for it on the new Kindle Fire HD or the smaller $159 Fire that was also announced earlier.

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Amazon announces X-Ray for Movies, a Kindle feature that uses IMDB to name the actors for you originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon unveils new Kindle Fire with doubled RAM, 44 percent better performance and $159 price

Amazon unveils $159 7inch Kindle Fire 2012 with 1GB RAM and 44 percent better performance

Amazon has officially unveiled the 2012 vintage of the Kindle Fire, which is reportedly 44 percent more powerful than its predecessor. The service-orientated slate (as opposed to a gadget, which CEO Jeff Bezos claims nobody wants) comes with a bigger battery, a new processor and 1GB RAM — double that of the 2011 model. The only other change comes in the form of a front-facing camera, unlike its closest rival.

Internally, the device is called the Kindle SD as it now plays second-fiddle to a pair of Kindle Fire HD devices with 1,920 x 1,200 displays, but will be called the “new” Kindle Fire in public. Amazon has also slashed the price of the hardware, which at $159 is $40 cheaper than Google’s Nexus 7 — as well as competing with e-book tablet adversaries Kobo Arc and the forthcoming Nook Tablet replacement with an “incredible” 243ppi display, unless Barnes & Noble are also producing SD and HD hardware. It’ll begin shipping on September 14th, with pre-orders expected to begin very soon.

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Amazon unveils new Kindle Fire with doubled RAM, 44 percent better performance and $159 price originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon intros Kindle Serials: buy once, get them all

Amazon intros Kindle Serials buy once, get them all

Amazon isn’t content to limit its attention to hardware today. It just introduced Kindle Serials, a way of consuming a steady stream of content: buy once and you get all future issues of a text, with new segments appended to the old as they arrive. Only eight titles are available to start, but Amazon is promising a modern take on history by offering Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist and The Pickwick Papers for free, serialized the way they were many decades ago. Episodes will cost $1.99 a pop, which makes them tempting for readers who just want a small literary snack — and authors that want to start seeing income in weeks rather than months or years.

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Amazon intros Kindle Serials: buy once, get them all originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon cuts the price of the lowest-end Kindle to $69, reader starts shipping on September 14th

Amazon announces $69 Kindle, shiping on September 14th

We’re just kicking off Amazon’s Kindle-themed press event today and it seems the company is starting off at the lower end: the company just announced that the $79 Kindle we’ve been recommending is now going to be the $69 Kindle. Now, CEO Jeff Bezos only briefly mentioned the device in his keynote, and didn’t clarify whether there are any cosmetic changes over last year’s model (we’re guessing not). Bezos did say, however, that the new Kindle will have new fonts, sharper text and 15 percent faster page turns. If you want to avail yourself of that ten-dollar savings, no need to wait: it’s up for pre-order today, and will ship next week, on September 14th.

Amazon cuts the price of the lowest-end Kindle to $69, reader starts shipping on September 14th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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