Amazon Fire Explained

Amazon Fire
Developer:Amazon Inc.
Manufacturer:Quanta Computer[1]
Type:Tablet computer
Smart speaker (by turning on show mode)
Os:Fire OS
Soc:TI OMAP 4 (1st and 2nd gen)
MediaTek MT81xx (5th gen and newer)
Cpu:Dual and Quad core (ARM)
Memory:512 MB RAM (1st gen)
1 GB RAM (2nd gen)[2]
2 GB RAM (12th gen)
Display:1024 × 600 px (aspect ratio 16:10), 7inches diagonal, appr. 21 in2 (21.37sigfig=2NaNsigfig=2) at 170 PPI-->
Storage:8 GB, 16 GB, or 32 GB
Display:7 inch, 1024×600 resolution, capacitive multi-touch display[3]
Graphics:PowerVR and Mali
Sound:3.5 mm stereo audio jack
Top-mounted stereo speakers (1st and 2nd gen)
Bottom-mounted mono speaker (5th gen and newer)
Camera:Front and Rear facing cameras
Connectivity:Micro-USB 2.0 (type B), USB-C 2.0 (12th gen)
3.5 mm stereo socket
Wi-Fi
Bluetooth (5th gen and newer)
Dimensions:190mm H
120mm W
11.4mm D[4]
Weight:413g[5]
Successor:Fire HD
Website:Amazon Fire
Releasedate: (US)
 (Europe)
 (Japan)
Unitssold:7 million
Service:Amazon Prime, Amazon Cloud Storage, Amazon Cloud Player, Amazon Video, Amazon Silk, Amazon Appstore, Amazon Kindle Store

The Amazon Fire, formerly called the Kindle Fire, is a line of tablet computers developed by Amazon. Built with Quanta Computer, the Kindle Fire was first released in November 2011, featuring a color 7-inch multi-touch display with IPS technology and running on Fire OS, an Android-based operating system. The Kindle Fire HD followed in September 2012, and the Kindle Fire HDX in September 2013. In September 2014, when the fourth generation was introduced, the name "Kindle" was dropped. In later generations, the Fire tablet is also able to convert into a Smart speaker turning on the "Show Mode" options, which the primary interaction will be by voice command through Alexa.

History

The Kindle Fire—which includes access to the Amazon Appstore, streaming movies and TV shows, and the Kindle Store for e-books—was released to consumers in the United States on November 14, 2011, after being announced on September 28.[6]

The original Kindle Fire retailed for in 2011.[7] Estimates of the device's initial bill of materials cost ranged from $150 to $202.[8] [9] Amazon's business strategy was stated in 2011 as making money through sales of digital content on the Fire, rather than through sales of the device itself.[10] [11] [12]

On September 6, 2012, the Kindle Fire was upgraded to the second generation, and its price was reduced to, RAM upgraded to 1 GB and processor clock speed upgraded to 1.2 GHz. On September 7, 2012, upgrades to the device were announced with consumer availability to those European countries with a localised version of Amazon's website (United Kingdom,[13] France, Germany, Italy and Spain).[14]

, the Kindle Fire was the second best selling tablet after Apple's iPad, with about 7 million units sold according to estimates by Forrester Research[15] and Amazon's tablets were the fourth best selling.[16]

The Fire tablet line was not updated until 2015; Amazon only released Fire HD and Fire HDX tablets during that time. In 2015, Amazon made a full refresh of their tablet family where they brought the range down market as a series of budget focused devices, returning to the lower-spec Fire line and cancelling the HDX line.

In September 2015, Amazon announced the release of the Fire 7, priced at for the 8GB version that displays advertisements on the lock screen. it was the lowest-priced Amazon tablet.[17] In June 2016, its price was dropped briefly to .[18] This fifth generation tablet introduced a micro SD card slot for extra storage.[19]

A slightly improved Fire 7 was released in June 2017, keeping the US$49.99 price point.[20]

An upgraded model of Fire 7 was announced in May 2019, with a scheduled release in June 2019 and keeping the US$49.99 price point.[21]

In 2022, Amazon released a significantly updated model of the Fire 7. New features to the basic Fire line are USB-C, Fire OS 8, a 2 MP front camera, a larger 10-hour life capable battery, and a significantly faster SoC with twice the RAM and storage of the previous generation. Though the tablet still features budget hardware, Amazon increased the base price to $59.99.[22]

Design

Hardware

The Kindle Fire hardware is manufactured by Quanta Computer (an Original Design Manufacturer), which also originally helped design the BlackBerry PlayBook, using it as a hardware template for the Kindle Fire.[23] First-generation Kindle Fire devices employed a 1-GHz Texas Instruments OMAP 4430 dual-core processor. The device has a 2-point multi-touch colour LCD screen with a diagonal length of 7inches and a 600×1024-pixel resolution (160 dpi density). Connectivity is through 802.11n Wi-Fi and USB 2.0 (Micro-B connector). The device includes 8 GB of internal storage—said to be enough for 80 applications, plus either 10 movies or 800 songs or 6,000 books.[24] [25] According to Amazon, the first-generation Kindle Fire's 4400 mAh battery sustains up to 8 hours of consecutive reading and up to 7.5 hours of video playback with wireless off;[26] later generations all offered around 7–8 hours[27]

Of the 8 GB internal storage available in the first-generation Kindle Fire, approximately 6.5 GB was available for content.[28]

The first-generation Kindle Fire has a sensor on the upper left-hand corner of the screen. This was widely considered to be an ambient-light sensor, disabled since an early software upgrade.[29]

Colour display technologies consume much more power than monochrome electronic paper (E-ink) types; Fire offer a typical battery life of 8 hours of mixed usage, while monochrome Kindles offer 15 to 30 hours' use without WiFi—"battery lasts weeks on a single charge"—with a much lower-capacity battery.[30]

Software

The first generation of Kindle Fire devices run a customised Android 2.3.3 Gingerbread OS.[31] The second-generation Kindle Fire HD runs a customised Android 4.0.3 Ice Cream Sandwich OS.[32] Along with access to Amazon Appstore,[33] the Fire includes a cloud-accelerated "split browser", Amazon Silk, using Amazon EC2 for off-device cloud computation; including webpage layout and rendering, and Google's SPDY protocol for faster webpage content transmission.[34] [35] [36] The user's Amazon digital content is given free storage in Amazon Cloud's web-storage platform, 5 GB music storage in Amazon Cloud Drive, and a built-in email application allows webmail (Gmail, Yahoo!, Hotmail, AOL Mail, etc.) to be merged into one inbox. The subscription-based Amazon Prime, which includes unlimited streaming of movies and TV shows, is available with a free 30-day trial period.

Content formats supported by the first-generation Kindle Fire were Kindle Format 8 (KF8), Kindle Mobi (.azw), TXT, PDF, unrestricted MOBI, PRC natively, Audible (Audible Enhanced (AA, AAX)), DOC, DOCX, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP, PSD, EPUB non-DRM AAC, MP3, MIDI, OGG, WAV, MP4, VP8.[37] [38]

Because of Amazon's USB driver implementation, the first-generation Kindle Fire suffered from slow USB transfer speeds. For example, transferring an 800MB video file may have taken more than three minutes in 2011.[39]

It is possible to convert a Kindle Fire to a tablet running standard Android, with some loss of Amazon-related functionality, and lacking features such as Bluetooth, microphone, camera, and memory expansion.[40]

In May 2022, Amazon announced the company were updating the foundation of the Fire Operating System. Amazon's next Fire 7 Tablet will come with the company's Fire OS called Fire OS 8, while Fire OS 7 has run on Android 9 since 2018, Fire OS 8 will be based on Android 11, which the company stated is a pretty significant upgrade to the foundational software currently powering Amazon tablets. With this development the company aims to introduce new user features such as a system-wide dark mode.[41]

Reception

Analysts had projected the device to be a strong competitor to Apple's iPad,[42] and that other Android device makers would suffer lost sales.[43] [44]

In a 2012 review published by Project Gutenberg, the Kindle Fire was called a "huge step back in freedom from the Kindle 3"; the reviewer noted that Amazon introduced a "deliberate limitation" into the Fire that didn't exist in the previous version: it is no longer possible to download free e-books from websites such as Project Gutenberg, Internet Archive and Google Books and have them stored permanently in the same places where books from Amazon are kept.[45]

Sales

Customers began receiving Kindle Fires on November 15, 2011; in December 2012, customers had purchased over a million Kindle devices per week.[46] International Data Corporation (IDC) estimated that the Kindle Fire sold about 4.7 million units during the fourth quarter of 2011.[47]

The Amazon Kindle Fire helped the company beat their 2012 first quarter estimates and boosted the company's stock in extended trading.[48] As of May 2013, about 7 million units had been sold according to estimates.[15] Statistics for FY2014 or Q1&2 2015 are not yet available.

Family

Up to the present, there have been many generations of Fire tablets spread across three different feature design lines: Fire, Fire HD, and Fire HDX.

Beyond this usage, Fire is also used for a range of media devices and for one generation of smart phone.

Models

Overview on generations and models for all Fire (including Fire HD) tablet devices:[49]

Detailed specifications for some of the 7" Fire tablets:

Generation
(within Amazon Fire tablets)
1st
(2011)
2nd
(2012)
5th
(2015)
7th
(2017)
9th
(2019)
12th
(2022)
Model Kindle FireFireFire 7
Code nameOtter/BlazeOtter2FordAustinMustangQuartz
Model NumberD01400[50] KFOTKFFOWIKFAUWIKFMUWIKFQUWI
Release dateNovember 15, 2011 September 14, 2012September 30, 2015June 7, 2017June 6, 2019June 29, 2022
Status
OSFire OS 1
based on Android 2.3.3[51]
Fire OS 2.4(?)
based on Android 4.0.3[52]
Fire OS 5
based on Android 5.1.1
Fire OS 5.3.6
based on Android 5.1.1
Fire OS 6.3.0
based on Android 7.1
Fire OS 8
based on Android 11
System Version6.3.4[53] 10.5.1
Fire OS (latest)2.4 3.1 5.7.0.0 7.3.2.9 8.3.1.9
Screen Size (diagonal)7"
Resolution1024 × 600
Density169 ppi171 ppi
CPUMakerMediaTek
KindDual-core OMAP4 Quad-core
Model4430 HS MT8127B[54] MT8163V/B
(in 32-bit mode)[55]
MT8168V/B
CoresARM Cortex-A9
@ 1.0 GHz
ARM Cortex-A9
@ 1.2 GHz
ARM Cortex-A7
@ 1.3 GHz
ARM Cortex-A53
@ 1.3 GHz
ARM Cortex-A53
@ 2.0 GHz
Width32-bit64-bit & 32-bit[56]
GPUDesignerARM Holdings
KindMali
ModelSGX540 450 450 MP4 T720 MP2 G52 3EE MC1
Clock304 MHz[57] 384 MHz 600 MHz 600 MHz[58] 520 MHz[59] 800 MHz[60]
StorageRAM512 MiB 1 GiB 2 GiB
Internal8 GB 8 GB or 16 GB 16 GB or 32 GB
ExternalAt least up to
128 GB microSDXC
At least up to
256 GB microSDXC
At least up to
512 GB microSDXC
At least up to
1 TB microSDXC
CameraBack2 MP
Front0.3 MP VGA 2 MP
MicrophoneYes
BluetoothBluetooth 4.0 LE Bluetooth 4.1 LE Bluetooth 5.0 LE
WirelessWi-Fi802.11 b/g/n 802.11 a/b/g/n (dual band) 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac (dual band)
+Cellularcolspan="6"
LocationWi-Fi based
Proximitycolspan="6" rowspan="2"
Compass
Light sensorcolspan="4" Yes
AccelerometerYes
Gyroscopecolspan="6" rowspan="2"
Barometer
Weight413g 400g313g 295g 286g 282g
Dimensions190xx 189xx191xx192xx192xx180.7xx
BatteryCapacity4400 mA⋅h 2980 mA⋅h[61] 2980 mA⋅h 3200 mA⋅h 3750 mA⋅h
Life (up to)colspan="2" 7 hours 8 hours 7 hours 10 hours

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Amazon to burn new tablet this week, says report . Marcus . Lai . September 27, 2011 . Punch Jump LL C . September 29, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120403150919/http://news.punchjump.com/2011/09/27/amazon-to-burn-new--fire-tablet-this-week-says-report/ . April 3, 2012 . dead .
  2. Web site: Kindle Fire Device and Feature Specifications. Amazon Mobile app distribution. Amazon. February 16, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130115170158/https://developer.amazon.com/sdk/fire/specifications.html. January 15, 2013. dead.
  3. Web site: Amazon Kindle Fire unveiled . Tyler . Lee . September 28, 2011 . Ubergizmo . Blogzilla LLC.
  4. Web site: Kindle Fire Amazon description. Amazon . Accessed: November 23, 2011
  5. Web site: Amazon Kindle Fire: what you need to know Updated: Kindle tablet release date, specs, features and more . Dan . Grabham . October 31, 2011 . TechRadar UK . Future Publishing Ltd.
  6. Web site: Kindle Fire Amazon - The Verge . 2022-08-10 . The Verge . November 13, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221113023358/https://www.theverge.com/products/kindle-fire/2506 . dead .
  7. News: Amazon's Kindle Fire to sell at $199, challenging iPad . https://web.archive.org/web/20111026062303/http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/breaking/chi-amazon-unveiling-new-tablet-today-its-challenge-to-the-ipad-20110928%2C0%2C2380818.story . October 26, 2011 . September 28, 2011 . Chicago Tribune . dead .
  8. Web site: Kindle Fire profitable at estimated $150 BoM. Rick . Merritt . September 28, 2011 . eetimes.
  9. News: Amazons 199 Kindle Fire costs 201.70 to build, report says . Nathan . Olivarez-Giles . November 18, 2011 . .
  10. Web site: Amazon's Kindle Fire is sold at a loss. Rik . Myslewski . September 30, 2011 . theregister.co.uk . The Register.
  11. Web site: Amazon to lose $50 on each Kindle Fire, says analyst. Lance . Whitney . September 29, 2011. CNET. June 26, 2020.
  12. Web site: Kindle Fire: the tablet that knows your next move. The Guardian / The Observer. October 2, 2011. John . Naughton.
  13. Web site: Kindle Fire Comes to the UK—Introducing the All-New Kindle Fire HD and Kindle Fire . September 6, 2012 . Amazon.co.uk . September 10, 2012.
  14. Web site: Amazon's Kindle Fire to go on sale in Europe (AFP). September 6, 2012. Phys.org. September 14, 2012.
  15. News: How Are 7-Inch Tablets Doing?. Brian X. Chen. . October 19, 2012 . October 20, 2012.
  16. Web site: Newsroom, Announcements and Media Contacts Gartner. https://web.archive.org/web/20140303215013/http://www.gartner.com/newsroom/id/2674215 . dead . March 3, 2014 .
  17. Web site: Amazon Fire tablets. March 4, 2016. Amazon. List of current Fire tablets on Amazon, sorted by price.
  18. Web site: You can actually get a brand new Amazon Fire tablet right now for $40. bgr.com. June 13, 2016. September 26, 2016.
  19. Web site: Fire Tablets MicroSD Card How To Guide – Everything You Need to Know. ebook reader. October 5, 2015 . September 26, 2016.
  20. News: Amazon Fire 7 (2017). July 5, 2017. PCMag UK. September 12, 2017. en-GB.
  21. Web site: Haselton. Todd. 2019-05-16. Amazon just announced a new version of its $50 tablet. 2021-10-21. CNBC. en.
  22. Web site: Amazon Fire 7 Tablet (2022 Release) Review .
  23. Web site: The Amazon tablet will look like a PlayBook - because it basically is. . Engadget . June 19, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170314174037/https://www.engadget.com/discuss/the-amazon-tablet-will-look-like-a-playbook-because-it-basically-is-g8d/ . March 14, 2017 . dead .
  24. Web site: Amazon Kindle Fire tablet unveiled: Android-based, 7-inch display, $199 price tag . Darren . Murph . September 28, 2011 . . AOL Inc.
  25. Web site: Amazon Kindle Fire vs. iPad 2 vs. Nook Color: by the numbers . Chris . Ziegler . September 28, 2011 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110930111558/http://thisismynext.com/2011/09/28/amazon-kindle-fire-vs-ipad-2-vs-nook-color-numbers/ . September 30, 2011 .
  26. Web site: Kindle Fire - Full Color 7" Multi-Touch Display with Wi-Fi . Amazon . March 18, 2013.
  27. Web site: Fire HD 6 - Amazon site . March 7, 2016 . Amazon.com. See "Compare Fire Tablets" section: New HD6, HD8, and HD10 all claim "Up to 8 hours of reading, surfing the web, watching video, and listening to music"; 7" Fire claims 7 hours.
  28. Web site: Dawson . Christopher . Kindle Fire: Edu holy grail or one more DRM-ridden toy? . https://web.archive.org/web/20111118160156/http://www.zdnet.com/blog/education/kindle-fire-edu-holy-grail-or-one-more-drm-ridden-toy/4738 . dead . November 18, 2011 . ZDNet . November 17, 2011 . March 18, 2013.
  29. Web site: Eric Bergman-Terrell's Blog . Ericbt.com . March 18, 2013.
  30. Web site: Kindle e-reader – Amazon's Official Site – Learn More . Amazon.com . March 7, 2016.
  31. News: Amazon's Kindle Fire UI: it's Android, but not quite . Sean . Hollister . September 28, 2011 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111031032335/http://thisismynext.com/2011/09/28/amazon-android-ui-kindle-fire-ux/ . October 31, 2011 .
  32. Web site: Getting Started with Kindle Fire. September 27, 2012. October 7, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121007072207/https://developer.amazon.com/sdk/fire/getting-started.html. dead.
  33. Web site: Tung . Liam . Amazon opens global Appstore by stealth . Itnews.com.au . September 20, 2011 . March 18, 2013.
  34. Web site: Amazon EC2 Underlies Kindle Tablet 'Silk' Browser . September 29, 2011 . Clint . Boulton . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111005152446/http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/news/amazon-ec2-underlies-kindle-tablet-silk-browser-40927 . October 5, 2011 .
  35. Web site: Introducing Amazon Silk . amazon.com . October 2, 2011.
  36. Web site: Introducing Amazon Silk. September 28, 2011. Amazon Silk team. amazonsilk.wordpress.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120705154238/http://amazonsilk.wordpress.com/2011/09/28/introducing-amazon-silk/. July 5, 2012.
  37. Web site: Kindle Fire - the Amazon Tablet with Full Color 7" Multi-Touch Display, Wi-Fi . Amazon.com . October 2, 2011 .
  38. Web site: Fire Tablet Specifications: Fire Models Fire Tablets . 2023-01-16 . developer.amazon.com.
  39. Web site: Storage Performance: Slightly Faster Than USB 1.0?! : The Amazon Kindle Fire: Benchmarked, Tested, And Reviewed . November 24, 2011 . Andrew Ku . Andrew . Ku . December 4, 2011. Tom's Hardware: Hardware News, Tests and Reviews.
  40. Web site: Turn your Kindle Fire into an Android 4.2 tablet . Cnet.com . June 21, 2013 . Rick Broida . March 7, 2016.
  41. Web site: The Verge. Amazon's updating the foundation of Fire OS to something a bit more modern. 20 May 2022. 25 May 2022.
  42. Web site: Amazon to Challenge iPad . John . Letzing . The Wall Street Journal . October 1, 2011 . September 28, 2011.
  43. Web site: Amazon's Kindle Fire Will 'Vaporize' Android But Leave Apple Unscathed . December 6, 2011 . The Wrap . March 18, 2013 . March 13, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130313133617/http://www.thewrap.com/media/column-post/amazons-kindle-fire-will-vaporize-android-leave-apple-unscathed-33340 . dead .
  44. Book: Gene Munster: Samsung, Others Should Worry about Kindle Fire . September 28, 2011 . Lee Brodie . . September 9, 2017 . October 27, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141027100223/http://www.cnbc.com/id/44707441/Gene_Munster_Samsung_Others_Should_Worry_about_Kindle_Fire . dead .
  45. Web site: Kindle Fire Review . https://web.archive.org/web/20130112063444/http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:Kindle_Fire_Review . dead . January 12, 2013 . December 21, 2012 . . March 17, 2013 . You can get free ebooks to the Fire too, but the process is so cumbersome that it isn't worth the trouble given the alternative of buying a Nexus 7, which handles free ebooks with ease. To be specific, there is no way to download free books from the web and have the Kindle Fire store them permanently or in the same places where your books from Amazon are kept. This was easy with the Kindle 3. No more..
  46. Web site: Amazon Appstore Presentation at CES. Amazon Appstore Developer Blog. January 7, 2012. January 6, 2012. January 19, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120119092336/http://www.amazonappstoredev.com/2012/01/amazon-appstore-presentation-at-ces.html. dead.
  47. News: iPad Mini: 6 Reasons Apple Must Do It. Thomas Claburn. InformationWeek. April 7, 2012. April 13, 2012. April 9, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120409150724/http://www.informationweek.com/news/hardware/handheld/232800453. dead.
  48. Web site: Nakashima. Ryan. Kindle Fire helps Amazon beat 1Q estimates. April 26, 2012 . Yahoo News -Tech. April 28, 2012.
  49. Web site: Fire Tablet Device Specifications: Overview . developer.amazon.com . May 31, 2021.
  50. Web site: Amazon Kindle Fire D01400 Tablet Teardown Electronics360. 2021-11-20. electronics360.globalspec.com.
  51. Web site: Fire Tablet Specifications: Fire Models .
  52. Web site: Fire Tablet Specifications: Fire Models .
  53. Web site: Fire Tablet Software Updates. Amazon .
  54. Web site: Tablet Device Specifications Fire Tablets. developer.amazon.com. October 29, 2018.
  55. Web site: Tablet Device Specifications Fire Tablets. developer.amazon.dom. May 21, 2019.
  56. Web site: Fire Tablet Specifications: Fire Models Fire Tablets . 2022-07-01 . developer.amazon.com.
  57. Web site: Amazon's Kindle Fire HD: Better; Can It Compete With The Nexus 7?. October 25, 2012.
  58. Web site: MediaTek MT8127 review and specs (Size, cores, gpu Gflops, GHZ, nm) .
  59. Web site: MediaTek MT8163 review and specs (Nm, gpu Gflops, size, cores, GHZ) .
  60. Web site: MediaTek MT8168 review and specs (Gpu Gflops, size, cores, nm, GHZ) .
  61. Web site: Macro photo of the Amazon Fire 2015 motherboard. forum.xda-developers.com. October 18, 2015 . December 23, 2015.