Amazon working on a 10-inch Fire tablet
Amazon is reportedly working on a new 10-inch Kindle Fire tablet. Evan Blass posted a press render of the alleged 10-inch Kindle Fire tablet, plus possible specs showed up at GFXBench website, revealing what we can expect for the tablet.
According to GFXBench, Amazon's 10-inch tablet will have a screen resolution of 1200 x 800 pixels and will be powered by MeidaTek MT8135 quad-core processor (two ARM Cortex-A15 and two ARM Cortex-A7 cores) with PowerVR G6200 graphics, 1GB RAM and 16GB storage. It will sport 5.1-megapixel rear and 0.9-megapixel front facing camera.
The tablet will ship with Fire OS 5 which is Amazon's custom version of Google Android 5.1 Lollipop with no Google apps on-board. A look at the renders also shows us the tablet's next version of Fire OS offering a user experience that's closer to stock Android. Until now Amazon's tablets have run forked version of Android with company's own UI on top with search bar and Android style buttons.
Considering the specs, Amazon's 10-inch tablet will be a decent low-cost offering aimed at customers that want a big screen tablet. A larger screen means users can watch videos, read eBooks, magazines and other content that does not fit on to a 7-inch tablet.
Just a few days back, a $50 Amazon Fire tablet made its way to GFXBench.
Via
According to GFXBench, Amazon's 10-inch tablet will have a screen resolution of 1200 x 800 pixels and will be powered by MeidaTek MT8135 quad-core processor (two ARM Cortex-A15 and two ARM Cortex-A7 cores) with PowerVR G6200 graphics, 1GB RAM and 16GB storage. It will sport 5.1-megapixel rear and 0.9-megapixel front facing camera.
The tablet will ship with Fire OS 5 which is Amazon's custom version of Google Android 5.1 Lollipop with no Google apps on-board. A look at the renders also shows us the tablet's next version of Fire OS offering a user experience that's closer to stock Android. Until now Amazon's tablets have run forked version of Android with company's own UI on top with search bar and Android style buttons.
Considering the specs, Amazon's 10-inch tablet will be a decent low-cost offering aimed at customers that want a big screen tablet. A larger screen means users can watch videos, read eBooks, magazines and other content that does not fit on to a 7-inch tablet.
Just a few days back, a $50 Amazon Fire tablet made its way to GFXBench.
Via
Amazon working on a 10-inch Fire tablet
Reviewed by Kaiser
on
9/17/2015 07:16:00 PM
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