MP4 test video ran in the same video player that the Fire used for playing videos acquired from Amazon, complete with that player's nifty 10 - second rewind button.
It did well, however, with text from a website screen, and it did a fair job rendering our 1080p
MP4 test video; overall it performed better than the vast army of Android 2.x tablets we've seen in the PCWorld Labs.
Not exact matches
I was able to sideload a
test MP4 movie using Dropbox, and it played very well and looked great, but given the Kindle's meager storage space it is much more suited for streaming
video than clogging up the internal storage space with large
video files.
Video Playback (
MP4): I've tried to play my usual set of Mp4 «test» videos, and I'm glad to report that all MP4 videos worked well — those for PSP and some that I created myse
MP4): I've tried to play my usual set of
Mp4 «test» videos, and I'm glad to report that all MP4 videos worked well — those for PSP and some that I created myse
Mp4 «
test»
videos, and I'm glad to report that all
MP4 videos worked well — those for PSP and some that I created myse
MP4 videos worked well — those for PSP and some that I created myself.
In our looped
video test, which involves playing a 720p
MP4 file at mid-level brightess, the Fire HD 6 lasts for 10 hours 25 minutes.
I
tested several
MP4 / M4V
videos and all played surprisingly well.
I tried my usual
MP4 and M4V
test videos and some played really well while others would occasionally flicker every now and then.
MP4 video to x. 265, the Aspire 5 again scored right in line with most similarly equipped laptops by completing the
test in 1,076 seconds.
And in our battery rundown
test, where we play a locally stored
MP4 video of The Lord of the Rings at full screen with brightness set at 50 percent and volume at 100 percent, the Lenovo excelled, lasting for 12 hours and 13 minutes — half an hour longer than the Dell 3189 and almost two hours longer than the Asus Flip.