[quote name='Corvin']Wow, I was feeling a pang of regret over cancelling and had decided to just hit Best Buy tomorrow to buy one, but damn, after reading the reviews, it seems cancelling was the best decision. No home or volume buttons is a head scratcher, and lag while turning pages? Come on Amazon, what the hell are the dual cores for?
I do find it odd, that no one noticed the lack of buttons before now. :lol:
I look forward to seeing the Nook Tablet reviews.[/QUOTE]
Oh I certainly noticed, and was mostly ignored and/or panned here for my opinions. This was written when the Fire was just announced in late Sept.
[quote name='ssjmichael']I feel like a lot of people might be disappointed by the limitations of the Fire out the box. While this tablet is running on Android, I don't consider it an Android tablet. I think a lot of people are however, and many are saying the Fire will take over the Android tablet market within the year.. I don't agree with that, even if it outsells every other device running Android (which it will)
I consider the Fire to be a jailed in Android device out the box. You are provided everything that Amazon wants you to use, that is to say, their own services. They created their own app store outside of the marketplace so that they'd have control over what apps you get to put on your tablet (and other supported devices). While Amazon's app store is certainly going to grow, it is still not comparable to the general Google Marketplace and thus is handicapped compared to most other Android tablets that can access the market.
There's obviously still a lot we don't know about the device so I shouldn't make too many early judgements but if it truly doesn't have access to the standard OS, and marketplace than I'd have to consider it a limited device.. That's not to say it'll be a bad device, it'll just be good at mostly Amazon related things such as their Kindle store, Amazon MP3, Amazon VOD, and whatever apps Amazon has in their store (they do have a lot of quality ones there).
Keep in mind I said out the box. Once the people at slatedroid get their hands on it, it'll be rooted in short order, and users can access the main OS and do whatever they want.
Some other things I'm not fond of:
- No sort of expansion (they couldn't even add a microSDHC slot?)
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The lack of any dedicated volume buttons
- No Bluetooth
- No 3G option (I wouldn't care but some here do)
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No physical home button (I could be wrong about that, but I don't see one)
- No HDMI out (this would have been great to use the device as an Amazon VOD receiver for your TV...imagine a dock where you could just drop it in, it would be awesome)
These are all subjective stuff obviously, but for a tablet to come out this day in age lacking so much stuff would be laughed at if not for the fact that this is Amazon's debut tablet, and the fact that it's $199. I don't think it would cost them much to add some of the things mentioned but some will no doubt defend them for doing so. And just to be fair, I do think having a jailed in device could be what the mainstream wants. This has been Apple's bread and butter with their "i" devices. They have all of their services on there, and ensure that the apps available works on the devices. If the Fire had direct access to the Android OS and Marketplace then it would appear less streamlined and a looser ecosytem if you understand what I mean.[/QUOTE]
I pretty much touched on a lot of the gripes that the reviews did without even having the device
