Monday, November 12, 2012

Can I merge the memory on my Kindle Fire?

Question by Zeb: Can I merge the memory on my Kindle Fire? Okay well on my Kindle Fire I seen that below "Device" on my Kindle Fire there is Application Storage and Internal Storage. The Inner Storage is five.36 GB and the Application Memory is one.17 GB. I nevertheless would rather not have a fifth of my memory just for apps so is there any way I can like merge them? Make it so there is no separate memory for apps? Thanks! Best response:
Reply by TheTruth
Hi Zeb, no you can't do it on Kindle Fire. Also, no mater what all Amazon trolls like George Y and Rose D post all around right here Kindle Fire is a lemon as reported concerns with Kindle Fire are that it runs hot to touch, video clip playback is jerky, touch display is not responsive and it takes two-three touches to register, energy button placement is really poor and is prone to accidental power off, all the hype of Silk browser is not correct where the browsing is actually slower than on other Android tablets, Wi-Fi connection offers a whole lot of difficulty to consumers on it, and so on. Also, Amazon's own net web site has hundreds of reviews (in excess of 1900 previously) of Kindle Fire's new owners that gave it 1 or two star testimonials and more than one,000 of three-star critiques due to the fact of choppy/laggy expertise they got from this underpowered device. You may possibly want to (while you can nevertheless return Fire) consider a seem at lately launched Nook Tablet - it is been getting rave evaluations and it is the very best device in it is class - considerably greater than Kindle Fire. It really is got Netflix, Hulu, Pandora, Angry Brids, and so on., the greatest battery daily life (30% better than Fire), the greatest non-glare laminated display (vs. very reflective not-laminated Fire screen), double the RAM and space for apps/photos/movies, microSD slot, a microphone for Skype, and physical volume controls on the side (neither of people on Kindle Fire), quite smooth video clip playback with exceptional screen, and very quick apps load. Verify out sample side by side pro overview: ENGADGET Each products rock 1GHz twin-core processors, but the Nook has an edge here, with its 1GB of RAM to the Fire's 512MB -- and certainly the big difference is obvious, even when booting up one thing as simple as a game like Angry Birds. Things are even much more pronounced during video playback. We took Shutter Island for a spin by means of Netflix streaming on both gadgets, and it was actually like night and day. Motion is far much less choppy on the Barnes & Noble gadget. The HD playback on the Nook also picked up subtle imagery like patterns on ties, which have been largely lost on the Fire
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