A kindle fire HD has 40 gigabytes
1. The Kindle Fire is $50 cheaper than the Nook Tablet. 2. The Kindle Fire has a very comfortable grip on its back. 3. The Kindle Fire has a better video streaming service. 4. If you buy Amazon's video streaming service you get free two day shipping on thousands of Amazon items. 5. The Kindle Fire has a faster web browser called "Silk". Device specks: 1. The Kindle Fire has a 7 inch screen like the Nook. 2. The Nook and Kindle Fire both have 8 gigabytes of internal memory. 3. The Nook Tablet has a micro SD slot that can give it up to 32 gigabytes of extra memory, but micro SD cards are very expensive. 4. The Kindle Fire has free unlimited cloud storage for Amazon content. 5. Price: Nook Tablet $250, Kindle Fire $200. 6. Video streaming: Nook Tablet relies on Hulu Plus, Kindle Fire uses Amazon Prime. By the way, Amazon has a larger selling platform.
There are many differernce facets about the Nook and Kindle that have to be examined and anyone can put together an argument as to which is better for them. The pricing of the Kindle is a little less than the Nook, however the Nook Tablet has 1 GB of memory versus the Kindle which has only 512 MB. The Kindle is better if you want to purchase exclusively from Amazon, but the Nook is better if you are looking for a more universal experience. I have to recommend the Nook Tablet from my research and from everyone I talk to who has the Fire or Nook. I have placed a "Related Link" with more information from PC World.
Depending on how many gigabytes or megabytes your kindle can hold. Books In Motion audiobooks are around 400 MB. 1000 megabytes equals 1 gigabyte. You're looking at about 2 audiobooks per 1000 megabytes.
About 8 GB but Amazon gives you some cloud storage that you can access on your Kindle in a Wi-Fi area. Also some can give you 16 GB and I heard some even give you 32 GB but that might cost extra.
Seriously? Is this a joke? It says on the HDD how much it stores!
**sigh** A gigabyte is a thousand megabytes which is a thousand kilobytes which is a thousand bytes. 19.5 kilobytes is about one 51282th of a gigabyte.
A lot.The Kindle 1 has 180/256MB of internal memory which can be expanded with the aid of an SD memory card. According to Amazon, that means around 200 non-illustrated books.The Kindle 2 has about 1,5 GB of memory, but you can't add a memory card. This means you can fit in it around 1500 non-illustrated books.The Kindle 3 has 3 GB of memory.Depends on how big the books are. Howe many books can fit on a shelf?
According to the recent commercials in July 2012, you can get the Optimum app on the Kindle Fire.
It will be 0.4982 GB. Following is a conversion rate: 1024 KB = 1 MB 1024 MB = 1 GB 1024 GB = 1 TB (which is highest unit for memory)
There is one way but it only works for the Kindle Fire, not the Kindle Fire HD. I have been trying for many hours to find out but sadly, no you can't. And even if you do have the Kindle Fire(not HD) you have to root it and download an app. I am still trying to find out, if I do I will get the word out.
The Amazon Kindle Fire can possess up to 1024 megabytes (MB); however, the first generation Kindle Fire has a smaller capacity of 512 megabytes (MB) total.
there is no limit