Amazon just ended support for these Kindle ereaders and Fire tablets, making them unable to access the Kindle Store.
Starting in May, you won't be able to access the Kindle Store from your older device. Here are your best alternatives.
I’m sitting in an Amazon conference room in Seattle along with a couple of other tech journalists. Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos is telling us about the company’s goals with its new Kindle Fire ...
Amazon is retiring support for these Kindle models, and many users are finding unexpected ways to keep them alive.
This past week, I got the Kindle Fire and the Kindle Touch in. My wife and I already both own Apple iPads to compare them to. One thing that jumps out almost immediately to me is that the Kindle Fire ...
Now here’s a competition that consumers can get behind: Two tablets with impressive specs, capable of doing pretty much any task you throw at them, and priced reasonably enough that entry level ...
Prime Day is quickly approaching, but if you’re in the market for an affordable tablet, there’s no need to wait until July 8. Amazon is currently dropping the price of its Amazon Fire HD 8 Plus (32GB) ...
Regardless of who is using the tablet, it’ll give you access to streaming services, podcasts, and your Kindle eBooks. And if the built-in 64GB isn’t enough for all your content, there’s a microSD slot ...
Amazon will roll out a critical update across its Kindle lineup tomorrow, removing the ability for some older models to ...