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4.6 out of 5 stars

Fire HD 10 Tablet (2019, 9th Gen, 64GB)

$75.99
$189.99 60% off Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: White
Screen Size: 10.1"
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Top positive review
16 people found this helpful
After Three Years of Use:
By Grass roots on Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2022
Performance in DEC of 2022 rivals that of today's (2022) 64/4 GB Galaxy Tab 7 lite - with the 64/2 GB 9th gen Fire 10HD coming out slightly better despite having half the system ram and more screen area to manage (I owe this to the fact that Fire OS 7.x.x is actually a version of Android 9 Amazon currently maintains in-house while the Samsung Galaxy is trying to push the added baggage that comes with Android 12 - more overhead.) WIFI reception is superior to all tablets I've worked with equalled only by an iPad. So in terms of security patches to the OS, battery life, and WIFI reception - the iPad or the Amazon fire tablets are in my opinion the only way to go. A word about security patches: in my opinion of all Android devices Samsung is the best, but they use a tiered approach - top line models get fairly timely security updates (I'm not talking about Google APP store updates, I'm talking about OS system updates which only the tablet maker can provide). Entry and mid level Samsung devices get these as little as twice a year (which technically honors their pledge to support their devices for four years but in reality ... sucks!). I have a $600 Galaxy S5E I bought the same time I bought this $200 9th generation Kindle Fire 10HD. I'm still waiting for Samsung to patch a bluetooth issue the Android Open Source Project announced publically as "severe" four months ago. Amazon patched it the moment the security issue was announced ... Four months later Samsung is still dragging their feet and I can't use Bluetooth head phones because of it or any headphone for that matter because the $600 Samsung Galaxy didn't come with a headphone jack which is kinda surprising since not only did Amazon include a headphone jack on the $200 2019 model, but Amazon includes a headphone jack on the latest 2021 11th generation model. Its performance is rivals the latest 11th generation Kindle Fire 10 Plus - I am comparing the 64GB versions of both, the first having 2GB of system RAM vs 4GB of the enhanced Plus version. I recently setup 2 of the 11th generation Fire 10 HD Plus models I got for family as gifts. I have one of those next to this one (I have a 9th gen and an 11th gen Plus side by side) actual viewing area is the same. There is more non-touch-sensitive safety area on the sides of the 9th gen in landscape orientation and the 11th gen has more finger safe area in portrait. But, both have adequate finger safe areas on all sides so you can safely pick this thing up without triggering half a dozen apps. I like the 9th gen better than the 11th by only marginal differences in ergonomics. Performance gains of the 11th gen Plus (with its additional 2GB of system ram) were huge at first, but then I did a factory reset of the 9th gen and noticed not only did it set up just as fast as (maybe even faster than) the 11th gen, but reinstalling the apps was a breeze and performance differences between them all but vanished (just don't "long press" the back space button on either one). EDIT ============================= This part of the review is being written on the latest 11th gen 2021 release Fire 10HD Plus with 4GB system ram and 64GB of internal storage. The 9th generation of this model currently being reviewed is sitting next to it linked to the same account, same router (home network), with the same apps installed. Both having been wiped and set up from scratch recently: GET THIS: The 9th generation is one quarter of a second faster than the 11th generation in app loads, and menu selections. Just to test cache loads I closed and reopened the same app with no other apps in memory four times each. The difference is only noticable by side. The 11th gen handles this text box much better; but even with the newest model you still have to be careful with the backspace/delete button or you'll loose more than you intended to delete because both register deletes faster than the OS can perform them, and they store up. The 11th gen handles the screen better: When I drag the map in the MyRadar app around with my finger the 2d scrolling is smooth and responsive with the 11 gen Plus model - the 9th begins to stutter as you zoom (but this is so minor). Now, if I tried to edit a 1000 page spread sheet while listening to Spotify running in the background during a unique collision with an untimely app store update the added 2 GB system ram would make a huge difference. I can tell you that 3 years later due to Amazon's diligence in keeping up with their version of the OS, Going with Amazon's Fire tablet proved to be a better decision than my purchase of a $600 Samsung Galaxy Tab S5E at the same time. END OF EDIT WITH 11th generation Fire 10HD Plus 64GB 2021 version.======================== If I were looking to spend less than $300 on a tablet I would prefer a Fire 10 HD mainly because I would feel more secure that the OS itself is not leaking camera, microphone, and data information due to outright negligence on Amazon's part. A word about Fire OS, and why I'm sold on it. Unlike Android tablets, Amazon historically runs a modified and well maintained older version of Android than competing Android devices for performance reasons. Does anyone remember running Windows XP on a desktop designed for Vista? That same machine ran XP four times faster than Windows Vista. So HP and Dell had to stop shipping desktops with XP when Microsoft stopped patching security issues and were forced to ship the much slower Vista (the performance gains of the latest hardware were lost to the added baggage of the latest OS making the newer machines slower than the older). BUT ... What if Dell had acquired the rights to XP and maintained the security patches themselves calling it Dell OS. Well, that's exactly what Amazon does with Android. So, Fire OS 8.x.x.x is actually Android 11 and Fire OS 7.x.x.x is actually Android 9 as I have learned. Running older but well maintained versions of Android just makes sense. Which one of us would use Windows 10 or 11 if we could get a still maintained version of Windows XP? The performance is just going to be better. People talk about converting Fire Tablets into Android tablets by hacking them. I have a $600 Samsung Galaxy I wish I could hack and convert into a Fire OS tablet because I percieve that Samsung is sloppy if not purposely negligent. As a side bar item: If you hack a Kindle with Fire OS 7.x.x.x to side load Google Play store, you will only be able to get Android 9 versions of apps which are no longer maintained. Once Fire OS 8.x.x.x is out, hacking it at best will give you apps maintained up to Android 11 compatible source code - which will fall out of maintenance as Android moves on to later generations. The most significant point I want to make in this review is that Amazon has demonstrated consistently over time that their tablets hold up well, and that they continue to commit to your Fire tablet's system firmware with timely updates long after the purchase.
Top critical review
3 people found this helpful
What are you planning to use the machine for?
By David J. Webb Sr. on Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2020
I have never been a fan of android. It is a gutted version really of Linux, possibly ubuntu. Making a custom machine is impossible for the android versions out there. The big problem I have with android systems is the periodic upgrade that requires new hardware to operate them and suddenly all the old software disappears to upload. What Amazon Fire Tablet division has done is put together a reasonably priced 10 inch screen with 2 gigs of Ram and a relatively easy to see screen for movies, music, ebooks from the library, and kindle books they can charge for. During the current national and international crisis most of the libraries in the country are closed. They are however allowing us to do a Kindle borrow from your local library. The real problem I see is the constant WiFi needed to run the books. On my regular computer it downloads to my machine for a set period of time and I am able to control it. That is using a standard obsolete windows 7 pro machine. The constant advertising makes this cheap tablet a piece of work. Greed has its place. But this would be a far more valuable machine if that annoying feature was discarded for something a little less boring. I built advertising for a daily newspaper for 41 years. I am qualified to review ads. In the words of one of my teachers in the ad building trade, "A good ad must attract the attention of a man on a galloping horse to stop and look at the ad." None of which these beautiful graphics appear to do. Instead they turn up at inopportune times and annoy rather than attract customers. All customers are liars. That is a well known sales proverb. Meaning people do not always do what they say they will do. I am using the machine to simply read e-books from my local library. They really need to install an Amazon version of Libby on all new machines as well as the standard overdrive for library use. So far turning off the automatic rotation almost works. It still will turn the page at unacceptable times. The Kindle loan feature is a good idea and has a lot going for it. Only it needs a tool bar on the side to make bookmarking a little easier. I do like the microsoft overdrive feature of easily returning read books. I love the longer and acceptable battery life of about 10 to 12 hours. What no one loves is the drain of said battery by hidden features. For the money it has several features I do like a lot. Like the ability to put a 512 GB storage unit on the machine. For altering things I want like a browser with a firefox sync and password manager easily accessed for passwords I have forgot that is a cheap and relatively easy thing to change and a whole lot less annoying than typing in a email address and a password on an awkward keyboard on the screen. I can go a year without using a website. Making my password easy for a senior to use is a mistake a lot of browsers currently make. I could name names. Locking the passwords is only convenient if the user can get to them easily. No security is reliable against a good hacker. Turning the entire machine off should disable WiFi for that reason. Only when someone is on the screen do you want outside access on any computer. If you are making your own browser then include what I just mentioned. You get what you pay for. Personally, a $35 Raspberry Pi for a competent linux user has a lot of practical free programs on it as does Google Play. Set the machine up to handle Google Play as part of the system and you just doubled the value of the tablet without doing much of anything. And yes given a less annoying machine will make you much more money that all of this advertising will do. I just value my time more than the extensive programming needed to make it work. As for your ads, the big mistake made is the ad creator is not using KISS. Keep It Simple Stupid! The entire purpose of all advertising is to get the potential customer to pay attention enough so they make a decision of their own free will to buy what you are selling. I suggest a very discounted price on a dummy line book explaining all there is to know about the tablet in simple non-techie terms. Make it a coupon that comes with the tablet if you haven't all ready thought to do so. The biggest advertisement for this machine is "what is in it for me?" For me, in my retirement, I love good authors and books. Mostly I borrow rather than buy with the exception of good how to do books that I can reference for a couple of years. My latest purchase was a Bread Lover's book on making bread with a machine including about 300 recipes. I seldom order from Amazon for one reason. You have been set back by about 50 years in your marketing because nothing arrives in under about a month while if I can I get a product from a retail store today the convenience of getting it today out weighs the price on-line right now. I bought the unit as an ideal compromise giving me a machine capable of movies, music, and conveniently any e-book or audible book in the resources of my local library. Yes I do have PRIME and have used it extensively in the last couple of years. To me it is almost worthless with the long wait for a product to arrive. Until that changes, I expect Amazon to lose a lot of money from lost business from that factor alone. I gave it a 3 star because of the common practice of annoying things. It got three stars because no one has a better price on a high-quality product. Also you really need to back off things that do cause the annoyance factor. I am retired. When I worked as a master printer in a composing room, my average return on the advertising was at least 19%. 19% on a circulation of about 100,000 newspaper readers back then caused most of my customers to come back for more advertising. One grocery was with us for 5 years. I am also a competent real estate salesman though I am too lazy to work that profession in the modern day. I have only had your particular machine for a few days. So the three stars may go up if I get used to the machine more.

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