![]() com Amazon Kindle store is accessible to any Amazon customers worldwide (except for customers who's account has an address in a country that has its own Kindle store). Thus, once Amazon decides the Logos App has gone Gold, then we should all be able to use it without problems.It's an artificial geographic restriction that Amazon have put in. Evidently, that extra 1 Gb is the SD internal card for Android Apps which is sealed into the Fire. ![]() I also noticed that after loading songs to my Fire the PC shows there are 5 Gb available on my Fire but the Kindle Fire shows there are 6 Gb available. I'll just check that site and install it when the "X" is removed. My own device's name was there in the purchase window with an "X" next to it indicating its not yet compatible with the Fire. Later: after I received my Kindle Fire I went to the Amazon Android App Store to the Logos App. Maybe Amazon is waiting for the app to go gold to allow it to be officially available at their App store. Is the beta version here at the same level? What is the link to the beta version here?ĭo you have any ideas when the Logos App will go Gold? I presume that Android Market version is also beta. I presume, by allowing the fire to install non-Amazon apps, one could install this version as well using the Fire's Silk browser. Shows Version 0.9.1 dated October 1, 2011, available for download. Odd that it dropped so little on that one! I also downloaded "The Complete Works of Francis A. The free memory before the download was 5.92 gig and after it was 5.89 gig. Searching seems speedy and I have not had any crashes in the 30 or so minutes I have used the app.Įdit: I just downloaded the "KJV Bible Commentary". I have not used any of the original language resources so I cannot comment on them. My initial impressions of the Fire are good and the Logos app seems to be a nice fit. I have quite a few apps and books downloaded on the device and I have 5.9 gig of the useable 6.5 available so I don't think it will be a big issue. I have only downloaded a few books and did not calculate the space they took. There is minimal delay when changing passages or even switching books in the passage guide, I would consider it very useable. As you may guess, books that are downloaded to the device are much faster to access than those on the "cloud". I have not tried to load Vryso app as it is not in the Amazon store and I wanted to use the Logos app first.Īs for performance and memory usage: The overall performance seems very good. Logos can be sideloaded on the Kindle Fire as I described above. They can do the minimum job but not as good as Logos, of course. If it takes up too much memory, I'll just use it on my PC and use the Amazon Kindle specific Direct Verse Jump KJV, NIV and NET (with 61,000 publisher notes). If I can reduce the size to half that for the Fire, it would work just fine. On my PC Logos takes up 5.66 Gb in 900 files. Is there some way to just load the NIV, The Bible Knowledge Commentary and Easton's Bible Dictionary and ignore all the other resources? How much memory on the Fire would that take including the basic app? Also, will it index itself upon installation so I could rapidly locate different passages in the Bible? I have 8 Note files for Logos and would like to sync them down to the Fire as well. However, I surely will not want all my Logos books cluttering it up. As soon as the Fire is received it must first be charged for four hours and then upgraded to Firmware Version 6.1. We should know by tomorrow if it will work properly. ![]() I expect mine at my door at 6:00 PM tonight.Īmazon just placed a new Android Logos App for the Kindle Fire in their App Store on here:
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