Kindle Fire vs. iPad 2 vs. Nook Color
What do you think about the best among these eBook readers? As, Amazon's long-awaited tablet is at last here, in the form of Kindle Fire. The $ 199 tablet is functioning a greatly customized version of Android, hooks simply into a huge bookstore of Amazon, and is intended for media consumption and, generally, reading. If this sounds well-known, it's because the Barnes and Noble Nook, published before months, is intended to basically the similar thing. The Nook Color is the most obvious competitor to the Kindle Fire, but given the advertising surrounding the new tablet; it looks more probable that the most significant question of the holiday season will be "should I buy the Kindle Fire or an iPad?"
Re: Kindle Fire vs. iPad 2 vs. Nook Color
The reply to that question cooked down to what you need to do with a tablet. The Kindle Fire and Apple iPad vie chiefly along content lines: The iPad has iTunes, with its lot of songs, movies and books; and the Kindle Fire has Amazon, with, well, mainly the similar thing. The Kindle Fire can’t battle with the iPad’s A5 processor, its 500,000 applications, or its 64GB of interior storage, but at $199 it doesn’t have to. The iPad is surely a more imposing machine, but that may not stuff to each user.
Re: Kindle Fire vs. iPad 2 vs. Nook Color
The dissimilarities between the Kindle Fire and the Nook Color boil down equally to a company vs. company discuss. The specs of the two devices are almost the similar: 7-inch tablets functioning greatly modified editions of Android, 8GB of internal storage, 8-hour battery life, Wi-Fi, and even related dimensions and mass. Barnes & Noble boasts a huge bookstore with tons of bulletins, and even children’s books; Amazon does the similar. If you’re previously in the Barnes & Noble bionetwork, it’s tricky to leave it for Amazon, but Amazon’s presenting of music, and TV shows as well to its book library is dreadfully compelling.
Re: Kindle Fire vs. iPad 2 vs. Nook Color
Obviously, the gossip mill is mixing with talk that a new Nook Color is in store, so Barnes & Noble could be balanced to leapfrog the Kindle Fire as it did to the Kindle with its Nook Touch Reader.