So, I got my Kindle Fire on the 15th and have been having fun with it ever since!
Used it so far to stream some videos using Amazon Prime, play Angry Birds (it is cheating on a larger screen, I swear!) and generally poking around to see what I can do with it.
After playing around for a little bit, I got sideloading apps working. Sideloading is the term that is used to describe installing third party applications that are not available on the Amazon App Store. Thankfully, Amazon made it pretty easy to do!
Sideloading How-To
- Find the APK for the app you want to install on your Fire. There are a couple of different ways to do this. You can use ASTRO File Manager to backup the app from your phone or use Titanium Backup (if you are rooted) to do the same thing. I used Titanium as I am rooted and had a fresh backup to work from and it was simple to transfer the APK to my desktop so I could drag it over to my Kindle Fire.
- Get the Kindle Fire ready. To do this access the menu (by tapping on the upper right corner of the screen). This brings up your menu. Select “More” and browse down to “Device”. Tap to enable “Allow Installation of Applications from Unknown Sources”. Now browse the Amazon App Store for a File Manager. I used ES File Manager.
- Now transfer your APK to your Fire (I just placed it in the root of the Kindle Fire so I could find it easy). Just plug it into your computer and it appears as Removable Storage. After transferring disconnect the Kindle Fire. Use ES File Manager to browse to the APK file and tap to install.
You are good to go now! No rooting needed for a majority of the apps out there. I suggest your first app to sideload is Dropbox so you can easily transfer APKs to your Kindle Fire.
Is the Kindle Fire an iPad killer? Or Galaxy Tab killer? No. I wouldn’t call the Kindle Fire a tablet, but a more powerful eReader that just happens to be running a stripped down version of Android 2.3 Gingerbread.
A note: the Kindle Fire does not come with the Google Services Framework. So getting Google Apps to run is a little bit trickier. I will post something later on that. So far I have GMail running, but it looks like I will have to root to get some of the other Google Apps to work.
More to come!