This Is What Happened When I Tried To Use Amazon's Kindle Fire HDX Tablet For Work (AMZN)
I can't even begin to tell you how much I enjoy using Amazon's latest Kindle Fire tablet, the HDX 8.9.
It's amazingly light (13.2 ounces, not even a pound!), fast (a 2.2GHz Snapdragon processor), with a responsive touch screen and great screen quality. Plus it has goodies like front- and rear facing cameras, surround sound, and the battery lasts forever. It's a joy to play with.
Jump straight to the photos showing what it's like to use the Kindle Fire HDX tablet for work>>
But for the past few weeks, I've been trying - mostly unsuccessfully - to use this tablet for work, not just play. By work I mean email, creating and editing documents, backing up documents to Amazon's built-in cloud service, and sharing them with my main work computer, a MacBook Pro.
I've been testing the Fire HDX as a work machine because Amazon has added a whole bunch of enterprise-friendly features to it, like support for corporate email, a bunch of security options and, most importantly, the ability to share documents with my work computer via the cloud.
Amazon upgraded the HDX to go after an area where the Apple's iPad has been killing it: work tablets. Over 90% of tablets in the enterprise are iPads and nearly all Fortune 500 companies are using iPads, Apple's CEO Tim Cook says.
That's a potentially huge market for a Kindle with its low price, $379.
<h3>The easiest part of using this tablet for work was setting up email. I Just put in my email and password. Worked perfectly. </h3>
<h3>Enterprise users can also easily add Microsoft Exchange email accounts, though they might need some info from their IT department to do that.</h3>
<h3>Downloading documents as email attachments worked well. It even recognized when I had already downloaded the attachment and "restored" it.</h3>
<h3>Multitasking between open apps was easy. Just swipe up on the bottom of the screen.</h3>
<b>See the rest of the story at Business Insider</b>
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