Showing posts with label TECH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TECH. Show all posts

New HD Tablet Kindle Fire 7

I liked the original Kindle Fire. I am an avid and loyal Amazon customer. forbes. The new Kindle Fire HDX, on the other hand, is an Amazon tablet I can love. I found that I frequently had to tap, tap again, and tap a little harder just to get letters to type on the display. I never really looked at the subsequent generations of Kindle Fire tablet until the latest models hit the street. The Kindle Fire HDX, however, caught my eye. I’ve had a chance to use both the Kindle Fire HDX and the Kindle Fire HDX 8.9, and they are both tablets that are both worth every penny, and worthy of the Amazon brand. The new case bezel is much more comfortable and easier to hold for long periods of time than the original Kindle Fire. The thinner edges make the Kindle Fire HDX and Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 more svelte than their predecessors. It’s the same composition as the case for Amazon’s Kindle Paperwhite. The smaller Kindle Fire HDX weighs less than 11 ounces, and is 7.3 inches by 5 inches with a thickness of only 0.35 inches. The larger Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is only 13.6 ounces, and is 9.1 by 6.2 inches, and an even thinner 0.31 inch thickness. The processor in the new Kindle Fire tablets is blazing fast. I assume there have been other hardware improvements in the touchscreen display technology, and software improvements in the autofill algorithms, but everything about using the new Kindle Fire HDX devices is faster, and more responsive than with the original. One area where the latest Kindle Fire tablets truly excel, though, is the display. The Kindle Fire HDX has a resolution of 1920 x 1200–delivering a pixel density of 323 PPI (pixels per inch). The Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 has a resolution of 2560 x 1600, with a pixel density of 339 PPI. The Kindle Fire HDX recently beat out leading small tablet competitors in a head-to-head shootout of display quality. The original Kindle Fire was a nice tablet. The Kindle Fire HDX and Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 don’t make me apologize for buying an Amazon tablet.
Fast & Furious 6: The Game Now Available For Amazon Kindle Fire Devices Kabam has announced the release of Fast & Furious 6: The Game for Amazon Kindle Fire devices. The game released for iOS and Android devices in May 2013 and quickly climbed the charts. Now fans can head over to the Amazon App Store to get the game for their Kindle Fire. Read on to learn more. Kabam, the leader in the western world for free-to-play core games, is releasing Fast & Furious 6: The Game on the Amazon App Store today for Amazon Kindle Fire devices. Kabam first launched Fast & Furious 6: The Game back in May 2013 for iOS and Android devices and it quickly sped to top charts in the App Store and Google Play in more than 100 countries worldwide. Fast & Furious 6: The Game is Kabam’s first free-to-play racing title and joins the company’s megahit roster of games including: The Hobbit: Kingdoms of Middle Earth and Kingdoms of Camelot: Battle for the North. Fast & Furious 6: The Game proved to be a company milestone by becoming Kabam’s fastest growing game of all time – racing past 17 million downloads just one month after hitting the App Store and Google Play earlier this year. Now, car fanatics, moviegoers and gamers alike can experience the rush of Fast & Furious on Amazon Kindle Fire devices everywhere. With gorgeous console-quality graphics, a responsive interface and a bounty of gorgeous cars (and of course, girls) this title will be sure to take you from 0-60 in no time at all. See Full Kindel Fire HD Tablet Amazon

Chromecast Google Wireless HDMI Streaming

As noted during the announcement, the dongle itself is a mere two inches long, with a bulbous circular end opposite the necessary HDMI port. It's got white Chrome branding printed on one side and the requisite FCC info on the other. While we take no issue with the shape itself, we're concerned that flared-out end might take up the space of two HDMI ports despite it needing only one to operate -- good thing you get an HDMI extender plug in the box to ensure that doesn't happen. It's a solid little thing, constructed of black plastic and jammed with the 2.4GHz wireless radio needed to talk with tablets and phones. There's no battery inside, however, which is why the dongle also comes with a micro-USB cable and an outlet adapter to provide it the juice it needs to keep the music and videos flowing. the act of throwing video from your phone using the YouTube or Netflix apps is dead simple, and anyone familiar with the mechanics of YouTube's "send to TV" feature will be right at home. In speaking with a Chromecast product manager, he was quick to point out that, while the underlying technology for Chromecast and send to TV isn't exactly the same; the major difference is that Chromecast has been built to scale and integrate with other services. During our brief demo, the system was able to send videos from both a Nexus 4 and an iPhone 5 with only a couple seconds delay before the requested content appeared on screen. Once a video was playing, the handsets could be used for other purposes or put into standby mode with nary a hiccup on the TV. Chromecast lets your stream online content to your TV and control it via your new Nexus 7 (also introduced today, along with Android 4.3) or any Android device running version 2.3 or later, according to published specs. To stream YouTube content, simply choose the "Cast" icon on the mobile app. I'm not saying Chromecast is a slam-dunk success, but I do believe Google has just done everything in its power to make it so. Its $35 price tag ($42 with shipping) is almost pocket change. The small size and likely low cost of the Chromecast components also mean Google has a better chance of convincing OEMs to embed this new technology.
google.com, pub-9199948838569400, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
http://apticirl.com/42Xv