I use my Amazon Fire HD 10 every day. At $120 it is the bargain tablet I wanted.
My bright red Amazon Fire HD 10″ tablet is amazingly darn useful. Compared to the Apple equivalent I’ve saved $100s of dollars on features I didn’t want to use. I bought this tablet as soon as it was announced, and it has become a pretty constant companion.
Tablets haven’t been central to my computing experience. I kinda feel like they are an in-between world of kludges for work-stuff and smartphone-features. As a work device I avoid them, but as an entertainment device I thought a tablet could be awesome. Awesome they be.
I tried an earlier Amazon tablet when I wanted to see what the world of Android was like. I quickly jailbroke that tablet and really enjoyed it. Without the world of Apple-connectedness I could use the tablet as a recreational device. I could avoid work and business communications! After a while Gmail and Slack found their way on to the tablet, and I tried using the FireHD to post to WordPress, but mostly what I found these tablets good for was the entertainments. When this 10″ tablet with faster cpu and high-resolution screen became available I knew I wanted it, and I knew I didn’t want to jailbreak it. Amazon’s OS offers me a few things I really like.
Amazon’s Android OS variant is designed to integrate your Prime libraries of video and e-books right into your tablet-top. Video is so easy to access, be it Amazon Prime, Netflix, Hulu or Plex. These four have largely replaced the 4 channels I grew up with (ABC, NBC, CBS and PBS) and with YouTube (the late night local station) are all we get. I have the same access to video content on the FireHD as I do on my big TV screen. I pay for those services and internet, I do not get cable, satellite or OTA tv here. I live in the sticks.
It is easy to download content to the device via Amazon, Netflix and Plex. I can take videos and music on plane rides, camping trips and live-aboard diveboats without worrying about connectivity. It pairs easily with all the bluetooth stuff I’ve tried. The SD card slot allows for plenty of storage and the integrated the storage space seamlessly once you insert a card.
Yes, Amazon also throws some shopping at you… You can ignore it. As far as I can recall all ads are screensaver-based unless you go into the Amazon shopping apps. You can pay to remove ads but I don’t really care. I don’t look at a screeensaver and an occasional ad for some kitchen gadget or a romance novel doesn’t bother me. I like kitchen gadgets and romance novel covers.
I do read books on this tablet, but only when I have decided to leave my Kindle home! I do find the display on my Kindle Voyage to be far better for long periods of reading. Games however are just fine there is lots of CPU for any tablet game I’ve downloaded. There are also some Amazon Twitch Prime perks that come through and let me have access to freebies and powerups I don’t really understand, but again this device is heavily integrated into the Amazon Prime economy.
The Google App store is easy to add, I offered some instructions here previously but I am not sure they are up-to-date with the current OS. Amazon has done nothing over several updates to disable this functionality. Having added the Google apps I use Firefox as my browser and Gmail as my email client. Everything I could possibly want to run, except Fortnite, is available. My 11 year-old daughter uses her Amazon tablet for everything except playing Fortnite, and does not like a computer with a keyboard, fwiw.
This is an entertainment device. It is super nice to have it separated from my work environment. If someone starts texting me, my teevee show isn’t interrupted. I don’t have messages flashing on the screen while I am looking at a recipe in the kitchen, or watching a Twitch stream.