The Amazon Instant Video app also won’t work with CyanogenMod, since it’s designed not to run on devices that have been rooted.
You also can’t run the Kindle Fire version of the Amazon Kindle app which offers access to the Kindle Owners’ Lending Library and Amazon’s “personal documents” service which lets you email eBooks and other content to a Kindle. Audio doesn’t work, which means you can’t listen to music or hear audio from videos or games on the tablet. There are still a few problems with CyanogenMod for the Kindle Fire.
Even then, only some keyboards seem to work. To do that while running the Amazon software you need to root your tablet, manually copy the keyboard app to your /system/app directory, and adjust the file permissions.
ADW LAUNCHER KINDLE FIRE HD ANDROID
You can also change keyboards simply by downloading and installing alternate keyboard apps from the Android Market or other sources when you’re running CyanogenMod.
ADW LAUNCHER KINDLE FIRE HD INSTALL
You can also download and install a different app launcher if you like. This lets you customize multiple home screens with app shortcuts and widgets. While CM7 might not give you much of a performance boost though, the operating system does make it much easier to customize your tablet.ĬyanogenMod ships with the ADW Launcher application launcher and home screen app. The Kindle Fire feels more responsive with CyanogenMod, but the truth is the tablet is reasonably fast no matter which version of Android you’re using. I also ran the SunSpider JavaScript benchmark using the Dolphin HD web browser on the Kindle Fire running both versions of Android, and there wasn’t much difference in the scores. This test looks at overall performance by running a series of sub-tests. In fact, the tablet scored nearly identical marks when I ran the CF-Bench utility. Interestingly, I’ve run a few benchmarks on the Kindle Fire while running Amazon’s software and CyanogenMod and there doesn’t seem to be much of a difference in overall performance. It includes a number of performance and visual tweaks as well as a persistent toolbar which offers home, menu, back, and search buttons at the bottom of the screen. CyanogenMod 7 is a version of Android 2.3 Gingerbread based on the Google Android Open Source Project.
The tablet seems to pause for a moment sometimes when launching apps, for instance, or when scrolling between pages in an eBook or magazine.īut since I replaced Amazon’s version of Android with CyanogenMod 7, the tablet has felt much more responsive. But at times the tablet can feel a bit sluggish when you’re running Amazon’s custom version of Android. The Amazon Kindle Fire has a reasonably speedy 1 GHz TI OMAP4 dual core processor. Amazon Kindle Fire with CyanogenMod 7 Android