The title is correct. After playing with the Kindle Fire for about a week and a half, we came up with custom settings for the Kindle Fire that will enable you to make full use of the screen area of the Kindle Fire for video playback. Share on:
The title is correct. After playing with the Kindle Fire for about a week and a half, we came up with custom settings for the Kindle Fire that will enable you to make full use of the screen area of the Kindle Fire for video playback. Share on:
To get an idea of what your Acer A100 (or any other 7″ Honeycomb Tablet) is actually capable of when it comes to video playback, have a look at these trailers. Because we actually use an A100 ourselves, we created custom settings for the A100 that enables DVD Catalyst 4 to create video files that…
If you want to show-off the capabilities of your new NOOKtablet, have a look at some of the movie trailers in this article. Share on:
If you want to put movies on your new NOOKtablet, just follow the steps in this guide. Share on:
Last night I watched a few Top Gear episodes through Netflix on the NOOKtablet, but after 1 1/2 episode, I switched to the Kindle Fire and continued on that instead. Share on:
A few days ago, I read a review on the Kindle Fire where they used “Netflix” to compare the video playback between the NOOKtablet and the Kindle Fire. I admit, Netflix on the Kindle Fire looks bad, but I believe that this is on purpose. Share on:
Created a while ago for the Xoom, I tried a 1080 sample mp4 file on the NOOKtablet. Share on:
I couldn’t resist. I had to pick up some supplies to finish up the bathroom, and across from Lowe’s is the B&N store, so I walked in and picked one up. Share on:
While the Kindle Fire is actually quite capable of playing video files at very high quality (way higher than what the screen is actually capable of displaying), there is a lot of talk on the web about the limited (8GB) storage space available. Adding to that a maximum file-size of 2GB per movie results in…
After playing with the Kindle Fire a bit, I’ve noticed that it does not like video files that are larger than 2GB. Standard DVD conversions work just fine, as well as HD-sized content (I tried up to 1080p), but if the files are larger than 2GB, the Kindle Fire will not play them. A 720p…