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Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2016 18:29:16 GMT
It is funny, a lot of people who have older Kindle Fires dislike the new Kindle Fire; yes, you can get used to it, but, personally, my trusty HDX is much easier to work with (the new HDX is much more expensive, so I don't want to upgrade yet). Well of course you don't really need to buy a Kindle Fire, these days. Kindle reader software, which is pretty much the same as you get in a Fire, is available for Android and IPad tablets I see on Amazon that both the Original Fire and the later HD version is seemingly still selling well. LP
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Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2016 18:40:36 GMT
Does it cope with accents? As long as the accents are available in the tablet (they are on my Samsung but you might need to check other models, though they probably are), you can access them from the WiFi/BlueT keyboards.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2016 22:56:47 GMT
My first tablet was a Google Nexus as I couldn't justify the expense of an iPad and found them too heavy. I hated it, and soon reverted to just using my iPhone. Partly the issue was poor battery life and the preposterous amount of time it took to charge, partly it was an aversion to Android.
When the iPad Air 2 came out that ticked all my boxes and I could no longer resist. I love it; relatively speaking the MBP rarely gets a look in these days.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 14, 2016 9:14:31 GMT
Hi Leslie,
Some manufacturers are increasing the time between battery charge, quite considerably, just from new battery and circuit board technology. Other manufacturers, instead of forever making their tablets thinner and lighter and having realised that users value battery-life more than a few less milligrams, are keeping the same sized case more or less, but with greater battery capacity.
The Apple machines were for years the pace leaders, but you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference in performance between them and some of the recent Android machines like the Samsung's.
LP
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