If both the Nexus device and the Kindle are using the same account, you should be able to read the same book. If you are sharing it (or loaning it) to another recipient, you would enter that recipient's email address, and send that book to them, regardless of what device they are using.
Yes. The Nexus 10 is 10.055 inches. The Kindle Fire is 7 inches. Even the Kindle Fire HD, which come in 7 inch and 8.9 inch versions, is still smaller.
You can share books on different Kindles if they are registered on the same amazon account. If they are on the same account, all the books that can be shared are in the Archived Items on the home page. If they are not registered on the same account, you can switch the registration and download the books on the Kindle and then switch back to your own account.
Yes, it does.
You would look up the Kindle version of the book on Amazon.com (since the Kindle is by Amazon). Once you find the book, there will be a link in the actions that says "Loan this book." You would click here and enter the friend's information. There are complete instructions on the Amazon site. See the link below.
It depends on what your preferences are. If you want an ecosystem that is very much focused into Amazon, then the Kindle Fire HD is a good fit. If you want an ecosytem that can utilize Kindle too, but is more open, has a large app library (Google Play), not to mention the various Google services (something that you have little to no access on a Kindle Fire HD), then the Nexus 7 is for you.
From what i know the app store is a lot better than the kindle fire. The nexus 7 has around 800,00 apps compared to Amazon's 600,00 apps. Amazon has popular apps but not much important apps. Other than than that i don't really know anything else the nexus 7 can best the kindle fire at. The graphics and sound on the kindle fire HD is just AMAZING. So yea......hopes this helps!
The Overdrive Media Console app should work with the Nexus 7. Also, you may be referring to the Kindle app, not Kindle Fire app, which is proprietary to that device. The Kindle app and Overdrive app both allow you to read eBooks, but where the former is connected to Amazon, the latter is connected to libraries worldwide.
To download an e-book on your Kindle, first connect your Kindle to Wi-Fi. Then, go to the Kindle store using your Kindle device, search for the e-book you want, and click the "Buy" or "Download" button. The e-book will then be downloaded to your Kindle for you to read.
No...the screen dimensions are different between the two devices, and even with the Nexus 7 itself, is a little different between the 2012 and 2013 versions.
Of these three, the best is the New Ipad (a/k/a Ipad 3).
You still have the book but it is like purchased in the app store
Probably since there's a number of Kindle Fire versions, the closest matchup is the Nexus 7 (2nd generation), and Kindle Fire HDX (7 inch), which were both released in July and September of 2013 respectively. On paper anyways, the HDX has the better processor (The Nexus 7's Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro vs. the HDX's Qualcomm Snapdragon 800). However, the Nexus runs on a "pure" version of Android OS, and gets Google updates. The HDX runs on a customized version of Android OS, and isn't known if it will get any updates.