![]() ![]() The Amazon Fire costs just £50 and is available in a slightly ridiculous “buy five get one free” (BFGOF) offer. The VGA selfie camera is marginally better, but that’s not saying a lot. It produces images of about the same quality and detail as a CCTV camera, and not a good one. The 2-megapixel camera on the back is terrible. The cameras are poor, only really good enough for Snapchat. A microSD card slot is available for adding more storage. The Wi-Fi and Bluetooth worked as you might expect. Charging was slow, taking more than five hours to fully charge. The battery lasted for around five hours of video playback with the screen turned up to maximum brightness, longer with it a little dim. Games such as Monument Valley took longer to load than an iPad, and switching between running apps was a little sluggish from time to time, but nothing that was too infuriating. Videos loaded and played promptly, games were smooth for the most part, including graphically intensive games on which the tablet’s bigger brother the Fire HD 10 choked. ![]() The tablet wasn’t especially sprightly in operation, neither was it lag-filled. The Fire tablet’s 1.3GHz processor and 1GB of RAM are not going to set the world alight, but they were surprisingly capable in my testing. The Fire tablet has 5GB of user accessible space on-board, with a microSD card slot for adding more.
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