Amazon Kindle Android Tablet Fire Now Being No. 1 in the World

Saturday 26 May 2012 | 0 comments



End of February 2012, this Amazon tablet accounted for 54 percent of all sales of Android tablet, while the Galaxy Tab samsung series came in second with 23 percent of all sales.

As quoted from ArsTechnica, the success of Amazon Kindle Fire is not surprising, because the Amazon Kindle Fire can be an alternative to the iPad with a cheaper price.

Kindle Fire not only offer low prices, but the Kindle Fire has the advantage on the content because of the extensive ecosystem of content offered by Amazon.

Increased sales of the Amazon Kindle Fire tablets are directly involved in the Android operating system to boost mobile market competition.

Somewhat different from other Android tablet, Amazon has its own application store and use the base Android 2.3 Gingerbread with changes in the various sides to reduce controls on the Google Android software on the Kindle Fire.

It is not yet clear whether Amazon will upgrade the base operating system to Android 4 or not, but not all applications are compatible with the Kindle Android Fire................


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Kindle, Wi-Fi, 6" E Ink Display

Kindle Fire Taking 54% Market Share Android Tablet

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According to research firm comScore, a website that engages in the statistical analysis of digital business, Amazon Kindle Android tablet market dominate the market with the number in the range of 54.4%. Ranked second, Samsung Galaxy Tab steal market share at 15.4% rate. Following in third place, the Motorola Xoom take the figure of 7%. This figure is for tablet users with the Android platform.

Kindle-fire

To own the largest number of tablets today is still dominated by the iPad from Apple. However, Apple seems to be alert to the movement of Fire tablet Amazon Kindle Android is. In the fourth quarter of 2011 yesterday, Apple's sales decreased from 61.5% to 54.7%. All thanks to a continuous penetration of Fire Kindle sales.......


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Kindle, Wi-Fi, 6" E Ink Display  

Master Kindle Fire Android Tablet Computer Market

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SAMSUNG should be proud with her ​​cell phone range to beat the triumph Nokia for 14 years. However, not so with a tablet computer.

Because, Kindle Fire now dominate the market of Android-based tablet computer. The report released by ComScore states that made ​​e-book reader Amazon has a market share of Android tablet computer with a 54% rate. While Samsung's Galaxy Tab is far below the rate of 15%.

In third position is occupied by the Xoom made ​​by Motorola with a rate of 7%, followed by a Transformer from Asus AT100 6% and 6% owned by Toshiba. Kindle series is using the Android operating system, but the modifications have been made by Amazon making it appear different from most other tablet computers that also use the Google's operating system.......


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Review Kindle Touch

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An Honest Review of the Kindle Touch
I've been a Kindle owner since the very old and chunky Kindle 2 device. Here's my personal pros and cons on the new Kindle Touch:

PROS ON THE KINDLE TOUCH:

1) Smaller and lighter than my previous Kindle Keyboard model. Dispensing with the physical keyboard and using an on-screen keyboard has saved a lot of space. This makes it nice and light to hold...
***
Not worth an upgrade
I will be forever grateful to my Kindle Keyboard 3G as it reintroduced me into the world of reading. Therefore, I was really looking forward to receiving the upgraded Kindle Touch. There are, however, some really disappointing features that have left me feeling somewhat let down by the product. The most annoying one is the search engine. Whereas the keyboard version lets...
Kindle Touch, Wi-Fi, 6" E Ink Touch Screen Display  
 
 

Review Kindle Keyboard 3G, Free 3G + Wi-Fi, 3G Works Globally, 6" E Ink Display

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Everything I hoped it would be
I hemmed and hawed a lot before ordering the Kindle; my first e-reader. I thought perhaps I'd miss something about the experience of reading a book. Perhaps I'd miss the feel of it, or the smell, or turning the pages. In actual fact, the only thing I miss is being able to re-read the cover and back page when I put it to rest after a long read. There's something satisfying...
Kindle Keyboard 3G, Free 3G + Wi-Fi, 3G Works Globally, 6" E Ink Display  

Review Canon EOS 1100D Digital SLR Camera (inc. 18-55 f/3.5-5.6 DC III Lens Kit)

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Amazing digital SLR
Many years ago I dabbled with 35mm SLRs but eventually decided it took years of learning and expeimentation to get good results and frankly got very frustrated. Since then I pretty much stayed in the "point and shoot" world. A few years ago I bought a "bridge" digital camera and the fact that the images were instantly accessible changed things completely. I've since grown...
Canon EOS 1100D Digital SLR Camera (inc. 18-55 f/3.5-5.6 DC III Lens Kit)
 

Review Nikon Coolpix P510 Digital Camera - Red + Case and 8GB Memory Card (16.1MP, 42x Optical Zoom) 3 inch LCD

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Technical Details

  • Highly sensitive, back-illuminated 16.1MP CMOS sensor and EXPEED C2 processor - means even clearer shots in low light situations
  • Record-breaking NIKKOR 42x wide-angle optical zoom lens (24-1000mm equivalent) - go further with powerful wide-angle to super telephoto coverage. From group shots to close-ups, this lens offers superb precision and sharp resolution
  • Advanced Lens Shift Vibration Reduction (VR) - Nikon's second-generation vibration reduction system reduces the effect of camera shake in real time and lets you use slower shutter speeds.offers superb precision and sharp resolution.
  • Full 1080p HD movie recording with stereo sound and still image capture,Built-in GPS with logging function
  • Nikon Coolpix P510 + Case and 8GB Memory Card
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Nikon Coolpix P510 Digital Camera - Red + Case and 8GB Memory Card (16.1MP, 42x Optical Zoom) 3 inch LCD


Review Nikon Coolpix P510 Digital Camera - Red (16MP, 42x Optical Zoom) 3 inch LCD

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Well worth the wait!
I'm so pleased I hung on for the release of this camera having nearly bought a different one a couple of months ago. It is my first Nikon, having had Fujifilm cameras before which I did really like but the lure of having an obscene 42 x optical zoom was just too tempting! Even at full zoom you get nice clear shots and the whole camera just seems to be much more user...
Nikon Coolpix P510 Digital Camera - Red (16MP, 42x Optical Zoom) 3 inch LCD

Review Nikon Coolpix P510 Digital Camera - Black (16MP, 42x Optical Zoom) 3 inch LCD

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Well worth the wait!
I'm so pleased I hung on for the release of this camera having nearly bought a different one a couple of months ago. It is my first Nikon, having had Fujifilm cameras before which I did really like but the lure of having an obscene 42 x optical zoom was just too tempting! Even at full zoom you get nice clear shots and the whole camera just seems to be much more user...
Nikon Coolpix P510 Digital Camera - Black (16MP, 42x Optical Zoom) 3 inch LCD

Review Xbox 360 Console (Buy this console and get a selected game for £20--Check out our bundle to find out more)

Friday 25 May 2012 | 0 comments


Xbox 360 4GB
The New 4GB Xbox 360 console has had a lot of improvements from the older generations of Xbox's. Microsoft seem to have really done good job.

Firstly the fans are a lot quieter which is surprisingly noticeable as they are incredibly quiet.
Secondly their are lots of air vents around the body to give better ventilation so their is going to be no more...

VS

Xbox 360 4 gb - fun but beware
Firstly - still have original xbox with a number of games.
Then bought PS3 - which developed fault in motherboard, which meant no internet connection for upgrades etc. Too expensive to fix.

So went to shop and asked about xbox 360 - 4Gb cheaper - so asked what difference was - assistant said if only for game saves and playing games 4 Gb was plenty, and usb...
Xbox 360 4GB Console  

Review Fujitsu STYLISTIC Q550 10.1 inch Tablet PC (30 GB SSD,Windows 7 Professional and Intel Atom 1.5 GHz)

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Grows on you
I was disappointed at first - in comparison with my HP Slate 500, which flies, the Q550 seemed sluggish and unresponsive. But then I spent a couple of days playing around... recalibrated touch/pen, re-installed some of the utilities, disabled Aero, tweaked the buttons and scrollbars for touch, increased the text size, disabled Indexing, installed MS Security Essentials...
versus
3 of 11 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars An insult to customers
Some people may wish to spend days tweaking this expensive tablet so that it finally works, personally I think it is a complete dog of a product and virtually unusable.

We have used tablets in the past but this piece of junk is truly awful and Fujitsu and /or microsoft should hang their heads in shame for releasing this.

The machine hangs, leaves...

REview Awesomenauts

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REview Awesomenauts

4.0 stars Excellent
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The good: Ridiculous Saturday-morning cartoon characters and presentation
Deep customization options for individuals and teams
Easy, accessible controls
The bad: Occasional online connection and balance issues
The bottom line: Awesomenauts is fun and frantic, and a great introduction to a typically unfriendly genre.


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Multiplayer online battle arena, or MOBA, is a genre of games that are well known for their intimidating learning curve and dense knowledge-base requirements on the PC. They're about as friendly to novices as an algebra problem is to a first grader. That's not the case with Awesomenauts, a console-based 2D MOBA that serves as an excellent introduction to the genre for the uninitiated and is a fun spin on familiar tropes for MOBA veterans. It's also got a French chameleon with a robo-laser sword for an arm, which ranks pretty high on the awesome scale.

Awesomenautsscreenshot
You'll find a lot of variety in the characters, from a French lizard assassin to a robot with a metal mohawk.
You play as one of six Awesomenauts on a mission to mine solar, a galactic fuel source and currency. Unfortunately, another group of Awesomenauts wants the solar too, and so you must fight to control the precious resource. The premise and plot are as absurd as a monkey with a jetpack, but Awesomenauts isn't about telling a story; it's about battle. You pick your hero, join two others (or AI-controlled bots), and slug it out against another team of three on one of a few symmetrical maps. Your goal isn't to kill other players, but to reach and destroy their solar core. While killing opposing heroes helps, this is not a game of 2D team deathmatch, and playing it as a straight team deathmatch game is a recipe for frustration. Success in Awesomenauts requires teamwork, strategy, and smart upgrade decisions.
You need your teammates to get to the solar core, which is housed behind layers of heavy-duty turrets. To aid you in your efforts, your solar base cranks out a never-ending stream of droids. They whittle away at the turrets, providing you cover to stand behind so you can blast them with your more powerful weapons. You battle back and forth, in a constant struggle to press forward into the opposing base.
It might sound like a plodding war of attrition, but the setting and crazy characters turn every match into a frenetic clash of strategies. It feels like you're always just one button--one quick decision--away from death or domination. The maps have multiple levels filled with jump pads, a couple of environmental hazards, and some local creatures you can kill for health. There's plenty of space to duke it out while your droids bop along on their paths of destruction. It's a dead-simple concept made more complex by the three player-controlled hero characters on each team.

Awesomenautsscreenshot
Taking on a turret alone is a very bad idea.
There's a lot of room for customization in Awesomenauts, both as an individual and as a team. The heroes blur the lines between traditional battle roles, like tank, healer, ranged, and damage dealer, thanks to a diverse set of upgrade options. As you fight, you earn solar, which you can use to buy upgrades and abilities. There are more than a dozen upgrades per hero, some passive and others active. Seeing them all listed before you can be overwhelming early on--this isn't a simple loadout choice like in a team-based shooter.
The upgrade path you follow can have a huge impact on a match. For example, you could go full-tilt tank with Clunk the robot and upgrade his bite ability so that it steals health and lengthens his health bar with each successful bite. Or you could be a bit of a glass cannon and dump points into his missile launcher and self-destruct ability. The former build makes him last longer, while the latter does more damage but could lead to more deaths, which costs you precious solar. Awesomenauts gives you wiggle room to shape characters to your style of play. Like with a good fighting game, in time, your favorite character will feel uniquely yours.
 
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