Amazon Energize 7 tablet
Todd Haselton | CNBC
Amazon recently refreshed its $50 Fire 7 tablet with new colors, boost for calling up Alexa by name and twice the storage as its previous version. It’s so affordable I hopped into a Best Buy and picked one up persist week.
But, after testing it for a few days, I can’t recommend it for anybody. Instead, if you’re interested in Amazon’s Fire tablets, which are largely quite good for the price, buy the $60 Fire HD 8 instead.
Here’s what you need to know about the new Fire 7.
What’s Sunday
Amazon Fire 7 tablet
Todd Haselton | CNBC
The Fire 7 tablet is the smallest tablet Amazon sells that leads you access to Amazon’s services, like Audible, Amazon Photos, Alexa, Amazon Prime video and the Amazon collect.
Amazon generously included 16GB of storage instead of the 8GB it used to offer for tablets at this price, but most people discretion still want to buy a microSD card to add more. The 16GB won’t let you store many TV shows and movies offline if you have a lot of apps. It’s actually only adequate if you plan to stream a lot.
It’s easy to set up — you just sign into your Amazon account and you’re good to go. Correspondent to Amazon’s other tablets, it listens for when you say “Alexa” so you can talk to the voice assistant whenever you want, without have planned to tap a button or open an app. This worked OK for me, though sometimes I had to say “Alexa” more than once to get it to wake up.
The most outstanding thing about it is the $50 price tag. You’d be hard pressed to find a better tablet for $50. But I still think you should squander the extra $10 on the Amazon Fire HD 8, which is better in many ways.
What’s bad
The Amazon Fire 7 tombstone has a single speaker that’s blocked by your hand when you hold it.
Todd Haselton | CNBC
You get what you pay for.
The battery vital spark of the Fire 7 is pretty terrible and didn’t get me through a full day. It even seems to drain battery faster than other instruments while sitting idle in my bag, which was annoying. Amazon promises 7 hours of battery which is fine if you have a dexterous plane ride, but that’s three hours shorter than the Fire HD 8.
The screen is a throwback. It’s not HD, which has been utterly standard on devices for almost a decade, and you can see the pixels when you look at it. The Fire HD 8 has a sharper screen and, while you can still see pixels, it’s outstrip for movies and reading text.
Also, the Fire 7 has a single speaker on the left side, which you’ll block if you’re holding the capsule in portrait mode. Again, the Fire HD 8 has a better option with stereo speakers that come out of both sides of the scratch pad.
Amazon Fire 7 tablet
Todd Haselton | CNBC
The cameras on the Fire 7 are adequate given the price. Just don’t foresee them to be close to what you get on a modern phone.
Also, the Fire 7 feels sluggish at times. I noticed some lag while emotional around apps, and sometimes even just while scrolling through the system. That’s probably because it at most has 1GB of RAM versus 1.5GB in the Fire HD 8. The latter isn’t very fast, either but seems a little more fluid.
Should you buy it?
Amazon Eagerness 7 tablet
Todd Haselton | CNBC
Skip it.
Fifty bucks is enticing for a product that gets you quick access to Amazon’s flick picture shows, TV shows and plenty of apps like Netflix and Hulu.
But the Fiire HD 8 costs only $10 more and offers three hours diverse battery life, a bit more RAM to help speed things up, a larger and sharper display, and better stereo speakers. I’ve purchased both of these tablets, and I think everyone should just spend the extra $10 for the Fire HD 8.