My son just got me a Kindle Fire 7" as a surprise. I'm surprise at all that it does, I would not have purchased one myself, but I'm loving it. I've only had it a day and I've loaded all sorts of stuff and only used about $20.00 for downloads and they even have sample of books you can look at. The Audio could be better but it will work. I was surprised it even had audio. This is the e-mail I sent my son last night. Kindle Fire is pretty cool. I have 3 games including MINECRAFT SKIN, PLANTS VS ZOMBIES, ASPHALT RACE GAME (this game is sweet, you turn the Kindle for driving and turbo is right tap and brake/draft is left tap) AND A FREE CHESS GAME. One book Stephen Kings Mile 81 and a bunch of Sample books (mostly about Computers I already own most of them but it would be nice to look at them on here) TV.COM NETFLIX PANDORA Maximum PC (for some reason had to pay for it, but not bad 12.00 a year) I need to start the e-mail and facebook apps. This is pretty wild, I didn?t know it could do all this. This will keep me busy, when I have to go on the run somewhere. Thanks son.
Amazon intros game-playing Kindle Fire
Online retailer's Android-powered $200 tablet to host Plants vs. Zombies and Angry Birds in addition to books, music, movies.
To date, Amazon's line of Kindle readers has focused on delivering users a single medium: books. However, today the online retailer announced the Kindle Fire, a new device designed not only for books, but also for music, movies, TV shows, and games.
Set for a November 15 launch, the $200 Kindle Fire is an Android-powered tablet with a 7-inch color touch screen. It will also feature a Web browser, email, and a variety of apps and games, including Angry Birds and Plants vs. Zombies. Additionally, Amazon has said one paid app would be made free every day, ensuring that even thrifty users can add new content on a regular basis.
The Kindle Fire features 8GB of on-board storage, which the retailer said is enough to hold dozens of apps, in addition to 10 movies, 600 songs, or 8,000 books. However, Amazon designed the Fire around its cloud storage options, so users can stream or download their content remotely with the assistance of a Wi-Fi connection. Unlike some previous Kindle models, the Fire does not have 3G networking features.
For more on the Fire, check out GameSpot sister site CNET's full coverage.
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