Amazon has two different lines of tablets: the Amazon Kindle line of ereaders, and the Fire →
Whether you bought a Fire tablet just for your child to use, or you want to →
When you bought your Kindle Fire, maybe you knew that you were entering a world without →
Fire tablets are pretty great. They’re inexpensive, they have parental controls, and the newest ones even have expandable storage. But →
Kindle Fire tablets have the built-in ability to password-protect or block different features of the tablet →
It seems that Amazon is really having some trouble with its consumer devices. While relatively more →
Amazon is still trucking along with its customized version of Android — though we’d imagine updates →
Last year Amazon entered the tablet and hardware market on an entirely different level with →
Amazon’s Kindle Fire has been the star of the show as late, but we can’t →
The popular bookseller Barnes & Noble surely have a great pair of tablets on their →
You could call Amazon’s Kindle Fire the anti-Nexus. While the newKindle Fire HDX may be →
The Kindle Fire HDX 8.9 is the second half of what Amazon hopes will be →
The ebook didn’t kill the paperback, and Amazon is counting on the fact that not →