Samsung Galaxy View online listing spills all the details

The Samsung Galaxy View has been teased and leaked a number of times over the past couple of months and the rather large 18.4-inch tablet has now been listed up for pre-order over at Adorama. The listing gives us a full run down of the hardware specifications, along with another look at the tablet.
The hardware matches up with a number of previous rumors. The Galaxy View features an 18.4-inch display with a FullHD (1920×1080) resolution, resulting in a pixel density of 120 PPI. This should be more than crisp enough for the typical viewing distances that you’re likely to use such a large tablet for and should be passable at close range too. The website is light on software features, but does mention touch and voice interfaces, meaning that the device can be operated at a distance.
The tablet is powered by Samsung’s own 1.6GHz octa-core Exynos 7580 SoC, which is dubbed Carmen2 according to the spec sheet. There’s also 2GB of RAM, 32GB of internal storage and a microSD card slot for an extra 128GB of memory, should you need it.
Samsung is clearly positioning the Galaxy View somewhere between a regular tablet and a TV.
Other hardware specs include a 2.1 megapixel front facing camera, which should make do for video calls. There’s no mention of a camera on the back, but you would have to be mad to lug this beast around to take pictures with anyway. The Galaxy View comes with a 5,700mAh battery, which Samsung says offers 8.5 hours of continual video playback.
The Samsung Galaxy View also comes with 3G and Category 6 LTE support, should you want to make use of mobile data. A Wi-Fi only model is also available, and both versions support Bluetooth 4.1 and GPS connectivity.
The other big give away with this listing is the price. The Galaxy View can be pre-ordered for $599, although Samsung has not officially announced price or availability details yet. What do you think?
18.4 inch Galaxy View images leaked
Samsung has a very large tablet in the works for people in need of a much bigger screen. An FCC filing was released a couple weeks ago showing some of the tablet’s design including dual speakers on the back of the device, and the apparent mid-ranged specifications that would suggest this tablet to be relatively affordable.
Now, we have a ton of images finally showing the front-side of the device in leaked promotional images. The most obvious change in this tablet compared to Samsung’s other tablets, besides the size, is the lack of it’s classic physical home button that Samsung has used since the Galaxy S3. Samsung will use Android’s onscreen navigation keys instead for convenience purposes, seeing how large the tablet is.
These images also highlight the tablet’s foldable back cover that allows the tablet to stand upright. The back cover shows an area near the top that’s open, possibly allowing the tablet to be hung on a wall. It’s apparent that Samsung wants this device to act as a house-hold necessity, and inferring that the Galaxy View will act as a mobile TV in the house or an electronic photo frame. The tablet also has an HD front-facing camera for video calls capable of 1080p recording.
Source: SamMobile
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Tesco officially calls time on the Hudl
Last week, it became apparent that Tesco wasn’t gearing up to release a new low-cost Hudl tablet, as it had done in October in years past. When asked about the future of the Hudl brand, Tesco confirmed it had no current plans for a third-generation tablet, but it did say: “We continue to sell our Hudl2 and it remains a popular device with our customers.” And so it appeared Tesco wasn’t quite ready to call it quits on own-brand hardware, even if a new device wasn’t in the cards, and probably never would be. A lot can change in a week, however, and it now looks like we’ve heard the last of Hudl, with Tesco no longer stocking its tablet in bricks-and-mortar and online stores.
“We have sold out of Hudl2 tablets and will no longer be selling it in our stores or online. We would like to assure customers that we will continue to provide technical support and help to all of our customers who have purchased a Hudl.”
No matter how you spin it, Tesco’s statement can only be the final nail in the coffin for the Hudl brand. It’s been looking bleak for a while now, though, with Tesco’s CEO saying late last year that he wanted to concentrate on the core grocery business. Since then, Tesco’s either shut down or sold off its various streaming services and e-book store, which were a major part of the reason the supermarket went into hardware in the first place. With those gone, it was only a matter of time before Hudl tablets stopped making sense. After all, if you don’t have digital outlets to promote, you don’t need a vehicle to promote them on.
Via: MoDaCo
iOS and OS X updates arrive with a ton of new emoji
If you’ve ever wanted to text taco pics from your iPhone or give the middle finger from your Mac, today’s your lucky day. Apple has released iOS 9.1 and OS X El Capitan 10.11.1, both of which add a slew of new Unicode emoji ranging from Mexican food through to rude gestures. There are some important under-the-hood fixes, too. Your iPhone 6s or 6s Plus is now smart enough to stop recording Live Photos when you lower the device, and OS X shouldn’t run into trouble with Office 2016. Whichever platform you’re using, you’ll likely want to update pronto — if just to see the cutesy characters you’d otherwise miss.
[Image credit: Emojipedia]
Source: MacRumors (1), (2)
ARM’s latest graphics core will speed up your smartwatch
Let’s be blunt: the graphics in most smartwatches suck. They’re frequently limited to basic effects, and you’ll sometimes see the kind of stuttering that has long-since disappeared on your smartphone. ARM aims to fix that, however. It’s launching the Mali-470, a mobile graphics core that’s virtually tailor-made for smartwatches, the internet of things and anything else where battery life is the top priority. The GPU supports the flashy per-pixel visual effects you see on modern phones (OpenGL ES 2.0, to be exact), but it uses half as much power as the long-serving Mali-400 even as it runs faster– you could see lively 3D animations that don’t kill your watch within a few hours.
ARM hasn’t named customers for the Mali-470, so it’s not yet clear just who’s using it in their processors. You’ll have to wait a while to use it, at any rate — ARM doesn’t expect the core to reach real, shipping products until late 2016. When it does, though, it could help usher in a new generation of wearables and smart appliances whose graphics don’t feel like throwbacks.
Source: ARM
1byone is giving away 10 USB 3.0 4-Port Hubs on Androidguys.com!
We know we aren’t the biggest Android Media outlet, and because we know that, and have some of the most educated and loyal followers, we want to thank you with giveaways. We are making an effort to lineup a few more product giveaways to thank you for your support, and 1byone is one of the first companies to hop on board. You may or may not have heard of 1byone, but they are a company based in China who makes fantastic products. 1byone has a storefront on Amazon.com with multiple products listed as the “#1 Best Seller” with over 13k ratings that average out to 5/5 stars.
I have been very fortunate to review a bunch of their wonderful products and hope they continue to keep up the high quality work, because they offer great products at bargain prices. Most recently, I was pleasantly surprised with their Bluetooth connected LED light bulb with a speaker built-in for $30 which you can check out my review here.
1byone is offering up their 4-Port aluminum 3.0 USB hub which sells for $12.99 right now on Amazon.com. For something so cheap, you would expect the quality to match. But let me tell you, it belongs right next to my Mac computer as it is made from the same materials and simply looks stunning. Not only does it look great but it also performs as advertised. You can even check out our review we did back in July.
This 1byone USB hub is perfect as our laptops keep getting smaller and smaller. Manufacturers are eliminating ports left and right.
In order to qualify for the giveaway(which 1byone has agreed to give away more than 10 if the response deserves it), all you have to do is Tweet to us, make a comment in Google+, Facebook or comment below(tell us you want a free USB hub) and we will select 10 lucky winners on Sat. Oct. 24th. Winners will be notified via the method we were contacted.
We aren’t doing this to collect your personal information. When the winners are selected all we need is an email address we can provide to 1byone so they can send a redemption code on Amazon.com. All you have to do is add the 1byone USB hub to your cart, like you would do with any other Amazon purchase, and then redeem the code for a free 1byone 4-port aluminum 3.0 USB hub.
Thank you again and look out for more giveaways in the near future.
Terms and Conditions
- Winners must live in the United States.
- We are not responsible for lost shipments.
- Only 1 entry per person.
- We reserve all rights to make any changes to this giveaway.
- Your email will be given to 1byone so they can email you a redemption code for Amazon.com
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Leak shows Verizon’s 10-inch budget tablet
You might not be very fond of Verizon’s Ellipsis tablets, but they do serve a purpose: they’re low-cost ways to get LTE data access on the road. And apparently, there are enough people buying them that the carrier is making a larger version. Evan Blass (aka @evleaks) has posted press shots of an Ellipsis 10 slate that (surprise!) translates Verizon’s no-frills Android strategy to a 10-inch display. There are no details as to what’s under the hood, but it’s clear that this tablet should run at least Lollipop. As for the release date and price? There’s nothing nailed down yet — we’re as in the dark as you are. The network has previously released Ellipsis models in early November for about $250, however, so you may well see history repeat itself.
— Evan Blass (@evleaks) October 16, 2015
Source: Evan Blass (Twitter)
Vodafone UK including free Huawei tablet with first 1,000 Nexus 6P orders

‘Tis almost time for new Nexi to ship to customer’s doors, heck these days even working demo models are even appearing in stores! Unlike in the United States where the pair of products is basically a Google-only affair, overseas international carriers are offering the models, too. Vodafone UK in particular, has a sizzling deal for the first 1000 eligible customers to pre-order/order a Nexus 6P on any 12-or-24-month Pay monthly bundle: they will receive a free Huawei MediaPad T1 7.0 tablet with their new phone!
The full details are as follows, as specified by Vodafone UK:
- The first 1,000 eligible customers to pre-order/order a Nexus 6P on any 12- or 24-month Pay monthly bundle will receive a Huawei MediaPad T1 7.0 (“tablet”) with their Nexus 6P (the “Offer”).
- The Nexus 6P pre-order is only available online. However, customers who pre-order in-store or by telephone will be eligible as advisers will process the order online.
- The offer excludes business customers, except small business customers (with 1-5 connections) who can pre-order the Nexus 6P via telesales to be eligible for the Offer.
- The Nexus 6P will be available for pre-order on 15 October 2015 and will be available to buy on 26 October 2015.
- The Offer is open to UK residents aged 18 years of age or older, subject to passing our credit check and accepting the Pay monthly airtime conditions
- The Offer is available to new customers (including transfers from other networks) and existing customers who are eligible to upgrade.
- The Offer is available while stocks last and will be withdrawn when the first 1,000 eligible orders have been made.
- We reserve the right to withdraw this Offer at any time without cause and will endeavour to notify customers if this Offer is withdrawn.
- Please note, an aftersales service will be provided by Huawei in relation to any warranty and repair queries for the tablet. The warranty for the tablet will last for two years from date of purchase and will be fulfilled by Huawei. Customers can contact Huawei customer services by calling 0333 370 0800, lines are open 9am to 5pm Monday to Saturday (except Bank Holidays) and will be charged at your standard network rate.
- The terms of this Offer will not affect any rights which you may have under any law and which we cannot exclude under any agreement.
As explained, the Nexus 6P will be available for purchase on October 26th, so there is still a bit of waiting to be done. While waiting for it to arrive, feel free to check out our hands-on impressions:
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And for those in need of a spec recap, here you go:
Nexus 6P Specs
| Display | 5.7-inch AMOLED WQHD 518ppi |
| Processor | Qualcomm Snapdragon processor 810 v2.1 |
| GPU | Adreno 430 |
| RAM | 3GB |
| Storage | 32/64/128GB storage |
| MicroSD | No |
| Networks | GSM 850/1900 W-CDMA 2/4/5 CDMA 0/1/10 LTE Band 2/4/5/7/12/13/17/25/26/41 |
| Software | Android 6.0 Marshmallow |
| Fingerprint scanner | Yes, rear-mounted |
| Camera | 12.3-megapixel rear cam, 8MP front cam |
| Battery | 3450mAh non-removable battery |
| Wireless charging | No |
| Dimensions | 159.4 x 77.8 x 7.3mm and 178g |
| Colors | Aluminum, Frost, Graphite |
With only the first 1000 customers eligible for the promotion, we suggest interested parties take action sooner rather than later. Good luck!
Amazon Fire review: $50 of incredible value
With every passing year, Amazon finds ways to upgrade its Kindle e-readers and Fire tablets while also lowering the cost of entry. The company’s Fire HD 6, launched last October, broke the sub-$100 barrier, and yet it now looks relatively expensive in comparison with the new entry-level Fire. At $50, it’s pretty much the cheapest tablet money can buy, but don’t let that price fool you. Compromises have been made in the race to the bottom, of course, but the pessimistic idiom “you get what you pay for” doesn’t really apply here. The new Fire might only be the cost of a night out, but what you’re getting in return is a perfectly capable device that sets a benchmark for budget slates.Slideshow-328275
Hardware

Some tablets are crafted using premium metal unibodies; some are designed with gamers’ sensibilities in mind; and some… well, they’re 50 bucks. Thus, you can forgive Amazon for paying only as much attention to aesthetics as was needed to create a Fire at this price point. That’s not to say it’s an eyesore, but it’s certainly on the generic end of the design spectrum: a single sheet of glass up front with a lightly textured plastic shell enveloping the rest of the device. What the Fire lacks in visual flair, though, it makes up for with a clever component layout.
The orientation of the Amazon logo stamped on the back of the device and the placement of the front-facing camera suggest the Fire is primarily intended for portrait use. That’s how you tend to hold it if you’re reading a book or browsing the internet, of course, but it’s no secret video is best viewed in landscape. And it’s clear Amazon’s paid special attention to that use case. The primary shooter and the small speaker grille on the Fire’s rear hug tight to one edge, for example, so your hands are unlikely to muffle audio output or obscure the camera lens.
Similarly, all ports and buttons (apart from the microSD cubbyhole) are crammed together along the Fire’s top edge. At first, I suspected this was for the sake of engineering efficiency, but all becomes clear when you load up a movie and flip the thing into landscape mode. The power key and volume rocker are now in close proximity to your left hand, while the micro-USB port sits high on the edge so that a charging cable won’t interfere with your grip. The position of the volume rocker I find particularly convenient, even though its unconventional placement baffled me at first. So, the Fire might be relatively ordinary to look at, but at least it’s been designed with usability in mind.

Now, the new Fire isn’t the thinnest or lightest 7-inch tablet that’s ever existed, but we’re still looking at perfectly manageable dimensions. It measures 191 x 115 x 10.6mm (7.5 x 4.5 x 0.4 inches), fitting comfortably in the palm of a largish hand. The plastic shell is rounded off in all the right places, too, so there are no sharp edges digging into your fingers and distracting you from that book you’ve been meaning to polish off. Taking into account the size of the display bezels, the Fire could perhaps be a little less wide and a little less tall; but the 7-inch screen certainly doesn’t look like it’s surrounded by an unnecessary amount of dead space.
Healthy bezels aren’t uncommon in the 7-inch category, and they’re a trait shared by many Amazon slates of old. All the internal components need room to breathe, after all, and I wouldn’t want the new Fire to be any thicker to accommodate smaller bezels. Anyway, they don’t impact usability and for $50, I can survive without an edge-to-edge display.
At 313g (11 ounces), the Fire is heavier than it looks like it ought to be, even weighing a hair more than Amazon’s new 8-inch Fire HD slate. It’s still more than light enough to slip in a bag and forget about, but a toddler that hasn’t been hitting the gym might be clumsier with it than they would a lighter device. If you are thinking about snapping up one of the cheap, entry-level slates for your tyke, then you might want to pair it with one of Amazon’s kid-proof cases for safety’s sake. There’s always the $100/£100 Fire “Kids Edition,” too, which includes one of the colorful bumpers, as well as a one-year subscription to educational content through FreeTime Unlimited (also known as Fire for Kids Unlimited in the UK) and a two-year, no-questions-asked guarantee.
Adults, even slightly heavy-handed ones, should get along with the Fire just fine. Sure, the plastic shell is susceptible to scuffing and the power key wobbles around in its socket a little, but the build quality of the device is otherwise of a pretty high standard. Its thickness undoubtedly contributes to the solid feel, and there’s hardly any give in the chassis when subjected to forceful attempts to twist and bend it. Let’s just say that it won’t disintegrate in a busy book bag, which for a $50 tablet, is tantamount to a compliment.
Display and audio

The new Fire is the only tablet in Amazon’s current range that doesn’t qualify for the “HD” epithet, but its 7-inch, 1,024 x 600 display isn’t too far off the 720p high-def standard. That said, with 171 pixels per inch to its name, the lack of acuity is definitely noticeable. Peer in close, and it’s easy to see the individual pixels at work, especially when you’re looking at the small, thin text used throughout the Fire’s UI. Book and album cover art in the on-device storefronts tends to look a little pixelated at this resolution, but as I’ve said a couple of times already (and will continue to), it’s hard to be judgmental of relatively minor shortcomings when you’re talking about a $50 device. An HD display isn’t absolutely necessary for reading, checking emails, browsing the web or playing the odd game.
With direct access to Prime Instant Video content in Fire OS, though, the tablet is supposed to be an all-encompassing multimedia buffet. That considered, the new Fire isn’t exactly going to win over videophiles when 720p content is a little noisy and heavily letterboxed. But, there are plenty of larger, high-res tablets available (at much higher price points) for those who require an excellent viewing experience; and you’re not going to be sobbing in a train carriage, cursing the resolution if you just want to catch a quick episode of Archer on the way to work.
The quality of the Fire’s IPS LCD panel is a bit of a mixed bag. Blacks are pretty good for an LCD display (which isn’t the technology’s strong point) and whites are spot-on as far as I can tell, but colors aren’t quite as saturated as they could be. They’re still at about an 8 or 9 on the intensity scale, however, so you’re not lacking a huge gamut of vibrancy. Viewing angles are surprisingly wide, but sunlight readability leaves something to be desired.

Direct sunlight is hard to find in the permanently overcast British autumn, but even on bright(ish) cloudy days, the panel doesn’t kick out quite enough power to eliminate glare entirely. Needless to say, the Fire’s screen doesn’t fare particularly well when uninhibited photons come into play. You’ll see enough to frame a photo and the stark contrast of black on white makes reading a book doable, but in most outdoor scenarios, you’re going to be staring mainly at your own reflection. While the max brightness of the display is partly to blame, I can’t help but think it’s not aided by whatever coating is on the glass covering it, or lack thereof. The Fire’s screen has a slightly “sticky” feel to it, picking up plenty of finger oil and grime, and clinging onto that muck for dear life.
The quality of the audio the lone, small loudspeaker spits out is, put bluntly, pretty terrible. It’s capable of kicking out noise at a high volume, but music has a horribly raspy quality to it that legitimately hurts the eardrums, and the louder it gets, the tinnier and more hiss-filled everything becomes. I’ve heard way better smartphone loudspeakers, which should be indictment enough. There’s little in the way of discernible bass tones, and it’s almost better that it’s facing away from you and not booming straight up into your ear canals. To be fair, the range in which it performs best is suitable for dialogue, so in a pinch, you could get through a whole film on the Fire without giving up entirely because of audio quality.
If at all possible, though, you’re going to want to track down a pair of headphones to level up your listening experience. Deep bass is still MIA and music lacks a little warmth, but audio is otherwise well-balanced and leagues more defined. Oh, and of course you also get the benefit of stereo sound.
Camera

While I highly doubt you’d ever think to use the new Fire to document your next sightseeing trip, the fact that Amazon even managed to stick two cameras in the device is commendable. You may remember that just a few years ago, Google’s first Nexus 7 tablet ignored a rear camera to meet a $200 price point. Understandably, the Fire’s shooters aren’t pushing the boundaries of portable imaging tech, but the VGA front-facer at least allows you to video chat with your nearest and dearest. Needless to say, it doesn’t take the most flattering selfies, and the 2-megapixel main camera doesn’t deserve a great deal of praise either.Slideshow-328276
The fact is, 2MP images are low-quality by design, so even in relatively favorable conditions pictures lack any kind of fine detail. These days, even budget smartphones have at least eight megapixels to work with, so I don’t remember the last time I even looked at a 2MP image — and I can’t say I’ve missed them. Aside from the low resolution of the images, the camera just isn’t very capable. It struggles to focus for landscape shots, spitting out a serviceable image only in the macro range. Pictures lack any real depth of color, too, which isn’t helped by erratic auto-exposure compensation that never seems to judge the appropriate level quite right. In comparison, the auto-white balance mechanism is pretty accurate, even in testing artificial lighting situations.
There are some benefits to having a low-spec primary camera. Shutter response and image processing are basically instant. HDR shots take only a split-second longer to generate, although I can’t say the setting improves contrast as much as it blows out pictures more than the auto-exposure mechanism tends to already. The camera interface on the Fire is extremely simple, which would be completely fine if I didn’t feel I could do a better job with a manual exposure-adjustment option. As well as being able to choose the picture aspect ratio (16:9 or 4:3), HDR, panorama and lenticular modes are all you’ve got. It’s almost impossible to get anything other than a Frankenstein-like picture using the panorama mode — just a bunch of images stitched haphazardly together. With the lenticular mode, you actually record a short video and view it by moving back and forth through the individual frames by tilting the tablet this way and that: a novelty at best.

Surprisingly, the quality of 720p video recorded with the main camera looks a damn sight better than stills. The focus holds steady; the auto-exposure compensation is only mildly fidgety; and audio comes through nice and clear, too. As is true with every camera, bright natural lighting is your friend, and the Fire’s primary shooter has no low-light performance whatsoever. There’s also no companion flash to help you out, so trying to take pictures in dark environments is simply not worth the effort.
The quality of the Fire’s cameras is another exercise in compromise, but at least they weren’t sacrificed entirely to meet the $50 price point. Chances are you aren’t going to want to use them very often — whatever smartphone you have in your pocket will almost certainly be preferable — but if you ever need them, they’re there.
Software

All the new Fire tablets run Amazon’s heavily customized version of Android Lollipop: Fire OS 5 “Bellini.” It’s a far, far cry from stock Android, but certain UI elements like the notification/quick settings drawer and task manager screen will be familiar to anyone who’s poked around Google’s OS before. Perhaps the most significant difference between the two is that Fire OS does away with the home screen carousel, where app shortcuts and widgets would live if you were looking at an unskinned version of Lollipop. Instead, you’re thrown straight into a grid view of your installed apps once you get past the lock screen. Slideshow-328277
Oh, and by the way, the lock screen is essentially advertising space, depending on how much you want the new Fire to cost you. For $15 or £10 more than the $50/£50 base asking price — so, $65 or £60 in total — your Fire won’t show “sponsored” lock screens that plug products (like tablet accessories), apps and other content. You can choose to opt out of these special offers after the fact, too, if you find them more irritating than you’d originally anticipated, but I really wouldn’t bother. Paying extra to have a custom lock screen doesn’t seem worth it when the rest of Fire OS is basically advertising anyway.
The whole reason Amazon is able to sell the Fire at such a low price is because it’s making little to no profit on the device itself. The idea is you’ll use the Fire to shop on Amazon, as well as get your content via Amazon’s various services, and the company will pad its bottom line that way. And Fire OS is designed with that strategy in mind. To the right of the home screen app list, Fire OS has eight additional panels that showcase many of Amazon’s products and services: e-books, video content, games, online shopping, apps, music, audiobooks and magazines/newspapers.

The reality is you can completely ignore all of this and use the tablet however you choose, but the downside to the Amazon-first UI is that you’re often a few more taps away from on-device content than you’d like to be. This is particularly true for video, which is probably why Amazon added a “My Videos” shortcut to the app list for getting straight to your on-device catalog. But, as much as you’re hard-sold in that direction, an Amazon Prime subscription might be worth a look if you’re not invested in a multitude of streaming services already. For $99 or £79 per year, a Prime subscription affords you unfettered access to Amazon’s TV, movie and music streaming platforms, as well as the Kindle free e-book lending library, among other perks.
The only service you might want that a Prime subscription doesn’t cover is FreeTime Unlimited. From $3 or £2 per month (for Prime members), the subscription grants free access to kid-suitable books, apps, games, movies and TV shows, all packaged in a colorful, simpler UI. Bear in mind, though, that you don’t need to pay anything to take advantage of all the robust parental controls built into Fire OS.
As far as the core experiences go, Amazon’s Fire OS doesn’t include any of Google’s services, but the equivalent Silk browser, calendar, email and file manager apps are completely adequate substitutes. Amazon’s own Appstore isn’t quite as well-stocked as Google’s, but nowadays, you’d be unlucky not to find whatever it is you’re looking for (or at least an app that does the same job). In some respects, I actually prefer Amazon’s Appstore, purely because there are so many free apps you have to pay for elsewhere constantly in circulation. And if you really, really need an app it doesn’t stock, you can download the Android APK file and install it yourself, minimal technical know-how required (i.e., nothing a quick Google search won’t teach you).
Performance and battery life

At its heart, the new Fire is powered by a quad-core 1.3GHz MediaTek processor (MT8127), paired with 1GB of RAM, which is more or less what you’d expect from an entry-level tablet. You’ve also got 8GB of internal storage, but only 5GB of that is available to the user, so it’s a good thing the Fire’s microSD slot supports cards as large as 128GB (Amazon’s also releasing a software update soon that’ll allow downloaded Prime Music tracks to be stored on the microSD card). As you’d expect with this kind of internal horsepower, the Fire doesn’t offer the same level of performance as top-tier slates do, but you’re not completely sacrificing usability for a bargain-basement price. Navigating around Fire OS is a pretty smooth, slick experience; it’s only loading times and responsiveness that stand out as a little slower than you’d see if a beefier processor were tasked with the same job. The auto-screen rotation mechanism takes a few seconds to correct, for example, but the Fire isn’t annoyingly sluggish by any stretch of the imagination.
Apps might not load instantly, and the on-screen keyboard takes a heartbeat to appear when you call upon it, but you’re never left waiting long. What I like most about the overall user experience is that it’s extremely consistent: It’s not so much slow as it is measured. The Fire rarely stutters or hangs; it doesn’t feel… clunky. The Silk browser, for instance, takes a second or two to load, and websites need a few more before all the various elements find their rightful places, but from then on, it’s smooth sailing — no jerky scrolling, major tiling issues or zoom lag.
You’d think the Fire would be best suited for more casual tasks, like browsing, email, social networking and the rest, but I’m impressed with how it handles more intensive exercises. There was always a chance processor-testing apps would expose the Fire as a low-end device that crumbles under higher workloads. However, 3D titles like Real Racing 3, Goat Simulator and Ravensword: Shadowlands mostly run smoothly on the new Fire, dropping only a couple frames here and there.

In terms of connectivity, the Fire only has the basics: Bluetooth 4.0 and single-band WiFi (802.11b/g/n). There’s not a great deal more you absolutely need, though, and the WiFi chip manages to keep a strong, unwavering two-bar connection in places where my first-gen iPad Mini can’t even see my home router. According to Amazon, the Fire’s 2,980mAh battery is good for up to seven hours of mixed usage, which in my experience, is an understatement. In our standard 720p, looping-video battery-rundown test (at 50 percent screen brightness), the Fire lasted nine hours and 20 minutes before dying, with all battery-saving modes disabled. That doesn’t quite match the iPad Mini 4’s 13-hour stint, but it’s almost two hours longer than Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S2 was able to stick it out for.
In everyday use, I’d say the battery life is more or less consistent with our rundown test results. The Fire burns almost no juice when standing by, so you can use it lightly over several days before you even have to think about recharging it. Falling asleep while watching a Twitch channel happens to me more often than I care to admit, and the Fire’s the kind of tablet you wake up to six hours later to find still connected and streaming.
The competition

Unless you want to roll the dice with a no-name 7-inch tablet, of which there are many available through sites like eBay and Amazon, it’s practically impossible to find a $50 slate. Even budget-friendly slabs from manufacturers like Archos and Alcatel are significantly more expensive despite being lower or similarly specced. You could always seek out a second-hand or refurbished device, but even then you’re still looking at paying upward of $50 for an old, used tablet.
The fact is, Amazon’s pushing the boundaries of affordability with most of its Fire range. If it’s a cheap Android tablet you’re after and you don’t mind the look of Fire OS, Amazon’s a good place to start. The new Fire HD 8 and HD 10 tablets start at $150/£130 and $230/£170, respectively, so I wouldn’t really consider those competition given the price leap. Even the Fire HD 6, launched last year, is markedly more expensive at $100/£80, with the main trade-off being a smaller screen size for a higher pixel count.
There isn’t a great deal more to say other than that the $50 Fire kind of stands in a league of its own — there isn’t another tablet that offers a similar user experience and spec sheet at the same rock-bottom price.
Wrap-up

Amazon’s new Fire isn’t aimed at graphic design graduates, and it isn’t made for videophiles needing 1080p as standard — it’s for everyone else. The overwhelming majority of people use tablets for exactly the same basic tasks: prodding out the odd email, browsing, playing puzzle games and watching Netflix in bed. The Fire is perfectly capable of doing all these things without a grumble, and it only costs as much as you’d spend on a couple of rounds of drinks at your local bar. If you want a cheap Android tablet for all your standard use cases, why would you bother to look elsewhere? Heck, buy five of the things to distribute amongst your whole family, and you’ll get a sixth free that you can leave in the living room for general use (but, seriously, you can buy a six-pack for $250/£250).
The Fire is no design icon, and it doesn’t have a high-definition display; loudspeaker audio is of poor quality; Fire OS is a giant advertisement; and the cameras aren’t very useful. Yet with all these shortcomings, the tablet offers respectable performance and good battery life, all for the paltry sum of $50. With that price tag, it’s impossible to be disappointed by what you get, because the Fire is a master class in value for money.
AT&T NumberSync lets one phone number rule all your connected gadgets
We’re encumbered with more connected silicon than ever before, and having to juggle multiple phone numbers for wearables and bigger screens, well, really sucks. To that end, AT&T just announced NumberSync, a free service that links all your other connected AT&T gizmos (think 3G smartwatches or tablets) to your main phone number. Better yet, incoming calls and text messages will get routed to all those devices at once — none of this hokey call-forwarding nonsense.
When you add a NumberSync-enabled device to one of AT&T’s Mobile Share plan buckets, you’ll get the option to turn on NumberSync totally free of charge. AT&T SVP Jeff Bradley says the feature will launch later this month with one supported device from a hush-hush phone maker (our money’s on Samsung), with a few more to follow by the time the holidays roll around. Ultimately, the carrier would like to see its full line of connected devices play nice with NumberSync’s sharing tendencies, but that’s a little easier said than done. And for folks like me, who have no less than five phone numbers running at the same time because of review phones, NumberSync doesn’t really help. It’s all about those other, non-phone connected gadgets AT&T wants to sell you. What AT&T’s basically doing here is taking advantage of the network upgrades it developed while rolling out Voice over LTE to kill a growing consumer headache and give their hardware partners a better shot at selling stuff at the same time. Clever clever.
But why the slow rollout, especially if most of the heavy lifting is handled on AT&T’s end? Can’t they just flip the switch for everyone at one? I asked Bradley what the deal was, and it’s because NumberSync isn’t a completely one-sided affair — phone makers have to modify software like the dialer and messaging apps to play nice with AT&T’s network modifications. Thankfully, most of this technical legwork should be invisible to you and me — enabling NumberSync on a secondary device like a tablet would require one final new step at the end of the normal setup process.
“The good part,” Bradley pointed out, “is they get better [at integration] once they get the first one under their belt.”
One of the few good things about the way our domestic wireless carriers work is that they’re totally fine stealing good ideas — it might give the originator ammunition to fire back, but whatever. In the end, it means benefits eventually flow to all consumers instead of just one subset of customers, and AT&T isn’t the only carrier that’s working on a network infrastructure that makes NumberSync possible. AT&T might have the head start on this, but seriously, the rest of you carriers had better get cracking too.

























