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Digital Storage Capacity: 64 GB
Offer Type: With Lockscreen Ads
Color: Gray
Style: Stylus Bundle
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- EXPLORE YOUR CREATIVE SIDE — Draw, design, and take notes with the Fire Max 11 and included Made for Amazon Stylus Pen. Convenient magnetic attach makes it easy to keep your stylus and tablet together.
- BIGGER, BRILLIANT, BEAUTIFUL — Vivid 11“ screen with 2.4 million pixels (2000 x 1200 resolution) lets you see every detail of your favorite movies, TV shows, and games. Certified for low blue light.
- MAX PERFORMANCE — Built with a powerful octa-core processor, 4 GB memory, and Wi-Fi 6 for fast streaming, responsive gaming, and quick multitasking.
- UNLEASH CREATIVITY — The Made for Amazon Stylus Pen helps you draw and design in apps like Picsart or seamlessly add notes to docs. The replaceable battery lasts up to six months.
- ALL-DAY ENTERTAINMENT — With 14-hour battery life, maximize your downtime for reading, browsing the web, watching videos, and listening to music at home and on the go. Save your favorites with 64 GB storage, and expand to up to 1 TB with micro-SD card (sold separately).
- CLEAR COMMUNICATION — The 8 MP camera makes for clear calls to friends and family on Zoom.
- GREAT FOR FAMILIES — Amazon Kids offers easy-to-use parental controls on Fire tablets. Subscribe to Amazon Kids+ for access to thousands of books, popular apps and games, videos, songs, Audible books, and more (subscription rates apply).
- THIN AND LIGHT — Sleek aluminum design is also durable. It has strengthened glass and is 3 times as durable as the iPad 10.9-inch (10th generation) as measured in tumble tests.
Ski9 –
Digital Storage Capacity: 64 GBOffer Type: With Lockscreen AdsColor: GrayStyle: Amazon Fire Max 11Verified Purchase
I got the productivity bundle and I am super pleased. I needed something to take notes with in classes, that also had a touch screen for drawing, and this is great for that. (Amazon app store has OneNote and Squid and both are great for notes with this.) In my experience it DOES matter which app you use with the pen because a paint app I tried worked but was slow (so I blame the app, since OneNote and Squid are fine). There is also a fairly new open source app called Saber that seems great (I still need to experiment with that one — available on F-Droid). I’m thinking that some of the professional reviews (on other web sites) got an early or different version of the pen because the harsh criticisms of it do not match my experience. It works great.
This is my 2nd Fire tablet, and I like it so much better than my first one, Fire 8 HD from 2017. I wasn’t unhappy with the old tablet when I got it (because I got it on sale for a great price) but I just almost never used it because the screen was so unpleasant and stressful to look at, plus the device was annoyingly slow. Not so with this new tablet — I am very pleased with the screen quality, and the speed is good for how I’m using it.
The pen and keyboard are also awesome. I wasn’t sure at first whether I liked the aspect ratio/shape of the tablet but actually it makes sense. The longer shape allows for nearly full-sized key spacing on the keyboard while not causing the tablet to be unnecessarily large and heavy, as it would be with the iPad’s aspect ratio. Someone said they prefer the snap-in clamshell keyboard that is available for the 10, but I much prefer this thin-and-light keyboard (didn’t have the 10 but considered it and looked at pics of its keyboard). It is super easy and fast to pull off and snap on the keyboard and it does not need batteries. At home (where I have “real” laptops) I use the tablet mostly without the keyboard, and half of the keyboard case stays on it, protecting the back and the camera, and giving the tablet a nice non-slip feel, plus I can use the fold-out stand. I don’t use it on my lap at school, and at home I use a lap desk so I don’t mind that I can’t put it directly in my lap. Really, I have no complaints at all about this setup.
Well, maybe I can complain a little about Fire OS but it is mostly okay. I would hate it for a phone but it is fine for a tablet. And it is much improved over what I had on my old Fire, especially the settings (I like to have control and info). I put Google Play on my previous Fire but I’m not sure I will do so on this one. I mean I have an Android phone that has things I’d like from the Play store, like my calculator collection and bank apps and whatnot. I don’t need to replicate that on this tablet. I’ve installed F-Droid so I can still easily put a bunch of nice apps on it. I have a Linux terminal app (Termux) and will probably install a Linux distro with desktop which will further expand the usability. Plus I have a Microsoft 360 subscription from work and it is nice to have an app for that on this tablet too. It has the most critical work apps like Zoom and Teams and Office and Outlook. So it already has what I really need on a tablet. Oh, and Kindle, of course. I think in the past it was almost necessary to side-load Google Play but the Amazon App Store is better now, at least for a tablet.
I paid to get rid of the ads (I value discounts a lot, but aesthetics even more) and now this tablet is a pleasure to use. And soooo much less expensive than a similar setup would have been from Apple.