Quote:
"While I get and appreciate the point, I must say those examples look a lot more cluttered and distracting than Amazon's customized Fire look.
If that's suggestive of what a 'standard' Android tablet looks like, I can see why so much of the consumer market waited for Amazon's 'non standard.'"
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You are right those are not very interesting screen set ups
I googled them rather hastily in response to Harr-Y's comment about the stock interface
I have attached some photos of a few of
my Kindle Fire screens
the only thing that identifies my device as a kindle is the obvious "Anabran's kindle" title in the upper left corner.
And btw I disagree the consumers were waiting for a Look different from android interface
it seems most were waiting for a tablet that did not start at $500 USD for the base model and required itunes to synch content.
only us 'tinkerers" or existing android users actually care that much about the interface IMHO.