Deliver to Hungary
IFor best experience Get the App
π₯ Elevate Your Entertainment Experience!
The Fire HD 10 Tablet (2019 Release) features a stunning 10.1" 1080p full HD display, a powerful 2.0 GHz octa-core processor, and up to 12 hours of battery life. With 64 GB of internal storage, expandable to 512 GB, and hands-free Alexa capabilities, this tablet is designed for seamless multitasking and entertainment. Enjoy your favorite apps and media with ease, all wrapped in a sleek, lightweight design.
Display | 10.1β high definition touchscreen, 1920 x 1200 resolution at 224 ppi, 1080p full HD video playback, with IPS (in-plane switching) technology and advanced polarizing filter, fully laminated display |
Size | 10.3β x 6.3β x 0.4β (262 x 159 x 9.8 mm) |
Weight | 17.8 ounces (504 grams) Actual size and weight may vary by configuration and manufacturing process. |
CPU & RAM | Octa-core 2.0 GHz with 2 GB of RAM |
Storage | 32 GB (25.3 GB available to user) or 64 GB (55.8 GB available to user) of internal storage. Add microSD card for up to 512 GB of additional storage. Some apps may require that they are installed on internal storage. App or feature updates may impact available storage. |
Battery life | Up to 12 hours of reading, browsing the web, watching video, and listening to music. Battery life will vary based on device settings, usage, and other factors such as web browsing and downloading content. Certain software features or apps may reduce battery life. |
Charge time | Fully charges in approximately 4 hours using the USB-C cable and 9W power adapter included in the box. Approximately 3 hours with 15W power adapter and Type C to C cable (adapter and cable sold separately). |
Wifi connectivity | Dual-band wifi. Supports public and private wifi networks or hotspots that use the dual-band 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n or 802.11ac standard with support for WEP, WPA, and WPA2 security using password authentication; does not support connecting to ad-hoc (or peer-to-peer) wifi networks. Wifi 6 (802.11 ax) is not currently supported. |
4G connectivity | N/A |
Ports | USB-C (2.0) connector and included Type-A to Type-C cable to connect to a PC/Macintosh computer, or to charge your device with the included power adapter; microSD slot for external storage. |
Audio | 3.5 mm stereo jack and integrated speaker |
Sensors | Accelerometer, ambient light sensors |
Camera specs | 2 MP front and rear-facing cameras with 720p HD video recording |
Location services | Location-based services via wifi |
Available colors | Black, Twilight Blue, Plum, White |
Additional features | Built-in Bluetooth 5.0 LE with support for A2DP compatible stereo headphones, speakers, microphone, and LE accessories |
Accessibility features | VoiceView screen reader enables access to the vast majority of Fire tablet features for users who are blind or visually impaired using text-to-speech or a connected refreshable braille display. Screen magnifier enables viewers to zoom in and out, and pan around the screen. Fire tablets also include accessibility settings for Closed Captioning, Font Size, High Contrast Text, Color Inversion, Color Correction, and Convert Stereo to Mono audio. (Captions are not available for all content.) Accessibility for Fire tablets |
Warranty and service | 1-year limited warranty and service. Optional 1-year, 2-year, and 3-year extended warranty available for U.S. customers sold separately. Use of Fire HD 10 tablet is subject to Amazon's Conditions of Use and these terms. |
Included in the box | Fire HD 10 tablet, USB-C (2.0) cable, 9W power adapter, and Quick Start Guide |
Generation | 9th generation - 2019 release |
X**3
Your money's worth and a LOT more...
I'm not the typical user of a tablet; not a gamer, do all my computing at home on a desktop, don't do social media, don't even have a smartphone. I've worn out one Kindle E-reader and am hard at work on the second. I would quite probably have let the tablet scene pass me by, except that I acquired (in 2013) one of the early Fire tablets (HD7) as a premium gift for buying a treadmill from Yowza Fitness. In a word, I loved it; book and magazine illustrations in Hi-def color was one of its most enjoyable features to me at the time. It was a little underpowered for video, though it would stream non-HD content fair-to-middling and play just about any downloaded video just fine, HD or not. So I used and enjoyed it for six years, until I caught wind of the soon-to-be-released Amazon Fire Tablet HD10; there was a lot being said about it, most of it quite positive, enough so that I took the plunge and invested a little less than 250 dollars (tablet, case and heavily-discounted SD memory card). I can't speak for others, only for myself, but I think I got a heck of a good deal. The tablet is beautifully made and has a good solid heft; the case is a perfect match for it. The designers and manufacturer couldn't have improved on it; for looks, I think they came up with a winner. The colors, graphics, video definition (it also streams HD just fine!) are all top of the line. It's a bit more complicated than the other one, but still easily learned. It comes with a fairly large number of Apps preinstalled, and that aren't designed to be removed; I don't mind that too much since there's only a very few that I wouldn't use at all, and I've got LOTS of storage space. But it is kind of annoying that I can't "hide" the icons that fill up the Home screen like I can do on my old desk-top Acer running Win 10. And while I have nothing against it, I also have no real use for or interest in the Alexa feature; its home-screen icon is four times the size of all the others, and constantly exhorts me to tell Alexa to do something. But those are minor details and take nothing at all away from my overall positive view of this exceptionally fine example of precision electronics. And the price! A genuine bargain. Thanks very much for a fine product and letting me say a few words about it.UPDATE TO ORIGINAL REVIEW January 26, 2021: I've had this tablet for just over 14 months, and have used & enjoyed it just about every day of those 14 months. I successfully installed Google Play Store shortly after I bought the tablet, specifically to get Google Chrome which greatly enhanced its value & utility. I was able to watch HD videos on YouTube, TV shows & movies on Amazon Prime, all without any buffering. I regularly read books & magazines in stunning color on the nice large 10-inch screen using the Libby App. In short, I was very happy indeed with my tablet. Which is why I was both surprised and disappointed when it suddenly and inexplicably stopped working. I'd been reading a library book off and on the past few days (I've read dozens on the tablet) and today I stopped reading to have supper; just closed the case like I've done from the beginning as it just puts the tablet to sleep. When I'm ready to use it again I just open the case and the advert screen comes on first; I just swipe upwards and get back to the exact page of my book that I was reading, or the home screen if I closed the app before putting the tablet to sleep. After supper today, when I opened the case, I was met with a blank screen, like I'd completely powered down (I hadn't). Pressing the on/off switch did nothing; pressing and holding for a slow count of 10 was the same. Plugging it in to the AC Charger should have within a few seconds rebooted the tablet; several times I've read or watched videos to the point where I ran out of juice and the tablet says "powering down" and turns itself off, but plugging it into the AC turns it right back on again, showing the charging symbol doing it job. The tablet was not low on battery power this time; when I closed the case to go eat supper the battery icon in the upper right corner read 48%; it should not have turned completely off, it should have just gone to sleep like it always has. Even after leaving it on the AC Charger for >2 hours, pressing the on/off switch did nothing; the tablet is completely dead, and I cannot figure out why; it was working flawlessly. What I said in my original view about its being an "exceptionally fine example of precision electronics" still holds. This is a great tablet; I just had bad luck with mine.Update to the Update: Jan31, 2022; Belive it or not, this same tablet came mysteriously back to life after sitting in a box from late January of 2021 to early October of 2021, i.e., about 9 months. I don't know why I pressed the power button; I was making room on the shelf with the intent to dispose of stuff no longer needed, and I guess I just did it because it still looked like new and I was on the verge of dropping it in the trash barrel. I was surprised, to say the least. It booted up like I'd been using it the day before, no errors, every app in place and functioning normally; all the Google Playstore stuff (including the Google Chrome browser). I remember it was quite an involved action to get Google Play installed. Anyway, I was both pleased and skeptical, which is why I didn't immediately go online and update my review back then; I wanted to wait & see, so to speak. It worked fine up until today, when I closed the case which put it to sleep; came back a couple of hours later, opened the case and it was dead as a hammer, precisely a repeat of what happened about this same time last year. Well, I'm still not gonna trash it; maybe I'll wait six months or so and try booting it up again; you never know...my basic opinion of the Amazon Fire HD10 remains unchanged; back when this tablet first went dead and got put in a box on the shelf, I'd immediately ordered a replacement which continues to work perfectly, and in fact bought the 2021 edition to stay by my easy chair in the living room to read and do email while the other is devoted now for strictly reading in my den and / or bedroom. Neither has been altered to include Google Play, which I'd always half-suspected might have contributed to this particular tablet's breakdown (twice!). I still highly recommend the Amazon Fire HD10 tablet to one and all. Thanks for letting me say what's now been a whole lotta words about it.
R**.
Best iteration of the Fire so far
In short, I bought the 10" and it's plenty fast. It does what I want. As a techie, I'm happy with it. I can only write about my perspective as a power user and not the conveniences that other people use, like syncing and whatnot.I bought this off of eBay and saved almost $50. Had issues with registration, but the eBay seller and Amazon figured it out and now I'm good. (Major kudos to Amazon for not just telling me to get bent because I bought it from eBay!)For a $150 device, the 2019 Amazon Fire is amazing. I've never owned an iPad and refuse to pay that much for such a limited experience using iOS. This is a fantastic value if you install Google Play and use it as a normal Android tablet.I was able to push Google Play and install my own apps. It works just like a regular Android tablet with the FireOS skin. I am running 7.3.1.0. I did not root my tablet, and I don't need to.It takes a four-second push with the power button to turn on, then less than 10 seconds to boot up into FireOS. The UI is extremely responsive thanks to the octacore CPU and 2GB of RAM. I can bounce between apps with no issues. I've installed an SNES emulator, Google apps, Duolingo, TeamViewer... nothing has slowed this down. The hardware AND the software is good enough where I haven't noticed any lag. You are able to disable select packages and bloatware via ADB... check out XDA if you want more info on how to do this, but remember that some packages interact with the different "tabs" for FireOS.Multimedia performance is improved with the 2019 in comparison to the 2017. With the 2017, I had to use a volume booster APK to "hack" and amplify the gain for volume because it was so soft with the internal speakers. This tablet is plenty loud. I can hear voices and make out what's going on at full volume. I can listen to music in a room at full volume. In comparison to the 2017, this doesn't suck anymore. Screen resolution is great... because honestly, unless you're looking for pores on faces, you don't need 4K on a tablet, because you'll need to look at the screen inches from your face to appreciate 4K. (The normal sitting distance from the couch will assure you that 1080p is good enough... hell, 720p is good enough. Your media source needs to actually be at a high bitrate, not just at a high resolution... since anyone can extend a video to 4K resolutions but lack the image quality of what 4K can provide.)I'm coming from the 2017 Amazon Fire 10"... that was, for some reason, rather laggy with even Chrome. This tablet feels like a contender with my Samsung Note 8. (Spec-wise, it's no contest, but if it FEELS good, I have zero qualms.) I don't feel like I compromised with performance here... and I hate lag.If you are upgrading from a previous Amazon tablet, this is the tablet to get. If you are comparing the Lenovo, Samsung, and other brand offerings, this is still the tablet to get for battery life and basic needs. (If you will work off of a tablet to do things other than BASIC productivity, like email, word processing, etc., I would recommend you look for better specs... and thus, spend more money.) Amazon takes losses on these tablets to guarantee service delivery and profits from their store. This makes sense to them. For you, as the consumer, if you are looking for a tablet that will make you happy for most needs, this works very, very well.HIGHLY recommended.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 week ago