Amazon's Kindle Fire HDX comes close to standing among those champion
slates. With its pixel rich screen, speedy guts and compact frame it's
Amazon's answer to the iPad mini 2 with Retina and the Nexus 7.
But instead of being the Jack of all trades you might hope for, it ends
up as that cliche device that's built more for pleasure, and
purchasing, than anything else.
It's a high speed gateway to
Amazon's world of stuff, all of it ready to ship right to your door, as
well as music, movies and games to download or stream. Those one touch
purchases are dangerously convenient, especially if you're an Amazon Prime member. The
tablet world moves fast and Amazon is iterating just as quickly as the
competition. So far its matched the yearly refresh rate of Google and
Apple, debuting the Kindle Fire HDX only twelve months after the first
Kindle Fire HD. My those tablets grow up fast.
Amazon currently makes the best ereader on the market, the near perfect Kindle Paperwhite. It's mopped up all competition from Nook and the like, but the 7-inch tablet is a different sort of game. With
the Kindle Fire HDX, it's also built an excellent Android tablet, from a
hardware perspective, at least. But while it's lightning fast and a
great way to enjoy books, magazines, comics, music and movies, it comes
up short in the places where the best tablets truly impress: third-party
apps and a whiz bang customizable interface.
Amazon has all the
media you crave, plus tube socks and cat food at rock bottom prices.
It's built a great tablet, an Android one despite what its Fire UI wants
you to think. But while it excels at getting out of the way so you can
read, watch and buy, buy, buy, is it lagging behind the feature curve
set by Google and Apple? Let's break it down.
Design
The 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX is no supermodel, but it is better looking than its predecessor, the brickish Kindle Fire HD. Note the thinner bezel of the HDX on the rightA bit of thickness has been shaved off its frame, giving it a depth of .35 inches, whereas the old HD was .4 inches. The new, thinner HDX is on topIt's
still a bit dull looking, especially from the front. The rear is
actually more attractive, with subtly shiny black plastic and tapered,
sloping edges. It's
built from the same soft touch plastic material as the Kindle
Paperwhite. It's pleasant to hold and grippy without feeling sticky. It
weighs just 10.7 ounces, so it's light enough to carry day to day
without adding much weight to your bag. Its overall dimensions are 7.3 x
5 x .35 inches, making it easy to hold in one hand, but too large for a
pocket. Amazon
opted to place the power button and the volume rocker on rear of the
HDX. They're clicky and easy to press, but despite their sunken design,
it's often hard to locate them. We frequently mixed up where they were,
especially when holding the HDX in portrait orientation.
The
requisite 3.5 mm headphone jack is found on the right side, and a
microUSB is on the left. Both do their jobs while keeping cords from
trailing over the display. There's also a front facing camera above the
screen, but no camera on the back.
Overall, it's a functional, but
less than eye catching design. It looks like something a power tool
company would design, a construction worker's tablet, until you light up
that screen. This is one of the places where Amazon's hardware stands
toe to toe with the competition. The
7-inch LCD display rocks a resolution of 1920 x 1200 and an intense
pixel density 323 ppi. Though seven inches isn't a ton of visual real
estate (this is a "mini" tablet, after all), it makes movies look
magnificent and keeps text nice and crisp. It's bright, colorful and
among the best tablet displays on the market.
When we reviewed the
Paperwhite, we bumped up against the limitations of a black and white
display when trying to read comics or books with photographs. That's in
no way an issue here, the Kindle Fire HDX makes all your Amazon
purchases look incredible. Of course, it's more draining on the eyes
than an e-ink display, but certainly the more versatile device of the
two. Nexus 7 to the left, HDX at the top, HD on the bottomIts
backlight is a bit less powerful than that of the Nexus 7, but in day
to day use that won't matter much, unless you're prone to browsing in a
completely dark room. We detected only one little flaw, a bit of black
shadow along the display's edge. It's only visible when reading
something with a completely white background like an ebook. Still, it's a
rather disappointing bit of quality control, like the dark spots that
appeared on the first Paperwhite, but were gone by the second iteration.
Other
than those dark spots, it stands among the best tablet displays on the
market. Holding it next to a Nexus 7 or any Retina iPad, you'd be hard
pressed to notice a difference, so it doesn't best the competition, but
watching a film on an HDX is just as nice as on any high-density 7-inch
tablet. The
HDX has fine speakers as well. They're mounted on the back of the
tablet, near the top, so it's easy to hold the tablet without covering
them up.
We've heard louder sound on other tablets, but even at
maximum volume, the HDX is free from the distortion that sometimes
popped up on last year's model. It doesn't scream, but it's good enough
to watch videos outside in a park without switching on the subtitles. We
don't often talk about accessories in a device review, but the origami
case sold by Amazon deserves a shout out. It's quite expensive at £45
for plastic and £50 for leather, but it's a really elegant combination
of protective cover and stand. When
closed up, it lays flat across the display and the rear, shielding it
from scuffs and scratches while adding little to the devices bulk. It
converts to a stand by folding the flap back and pinching it together.
It holds it at a perfect horizontal angle for movie watching, and keeps
it upright in portrait mode as well, though with a slight lean.
The
cover sticks to the rear with a magnet of impressive strength. You can
hold it by the flap and give it a shake without causing a tumble. If
you're buying an HDX, you really ought to consider some sort of cover,
if not this one. No one likes a scratched tablet.
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