These Fire Kids Edition tablets are a MUST HAVE. From the educational
goals, to the time limits, the books, the learning games, the WiFi
free downloads for on the go use... it’s just perfect for
developing little minds. It has the option to have multiple profiles
and can be a regular tablet for the adults too.
Fire HD 10 Kids
Edition is built around three ideas:
1. Kids want a real
tablet, not a toy— Fire HD 10 Kids Edition offers a 10.1” 1080p
Full HD display, an ultra-fast quad-core processor, 32 GB of storage
with up to 256 GB of expandable storage via a microSD card slot, and
up to 10 hours of battery life, so kids can enjoy the Full HD videos
they love and play games with the fast performance they want.
2. Parents don’t
want to worry about the content their kids are viewing—Includes a
year of Amazon FreeTime Unlimited, which offers more than 15,000
books, videos, educational apps, and games that have been curated for
age-appropriateness, plus access to tens of thousands of
hand-selected websites and YouTube videos and world-class parental
controls—at no additional cost.
3. Despite best
intentions, kids break things—Fire Kids Edition tablets come with a
kid-proof case available in blue, pink, or yellow, and a two-year
worry-free guarantee—if they break it, return it and we’ll
replace it. No questions asked.
“Our Fire Kids
Edition tablets provide the perfect balance of offering
age-appropriate content kids love and tools parents trust, and we’re
thrilled that customers have made us the #1 best-selling kids tablet
in the U.S.,” said Kurt Beidler, Director of Kids & Family,
Amazon. “Our latest kids tablet, the all-new Fire HD 10 Kids
Edition, is the largest and fastest kids tablet we’ve ever offered,
with a beautiful 10.1” 1080p Full HD display, ultra-fast processor,
and thousands of books, videos, apps and games—we think families
are going to love it.”
The Content Kids
Love, Available on the Go
Fire HD 10 Kids
Edition includes a year of Amazon FreeTime Unlimited, an
all-you-can-eat subscription service that gives kids ages 3-12
unlimited access to over 15,000 age-appropriate books, videos,
educational apps, and games with new titles added regularly. Kids can
enjoy new and popular titles, like Splat the Cat, Crossy Road, Fruit
Ninja, Lost in Oz, Star Wars: Puzzle Droids, Teeny Titans – Teen
Titans Go!, and more—available from popular brands like Disney,
Nickelodeon, Amazon Studios, PBS Kids, HarperCollins, and Macmillan.
Parents can also add content they own, like Netflix or Minecraft,
into their child’s FreeTime profile. For ultimate entertainment on
the go, FreeTime Unlimited content can also be downloaded for viewing
offline, such as while in the car or on an airplane. Amazon FreeTime
also includes a kid-friendly web browser that provides kids with
controlled access to tens of thousands of YouTube videos and
websites—parents can also add more websites if they choose to. All
of the content is kid-friendly, age-appropriate, and hand-selected by
the Amazon FreeTime team.
After the first
year, Amazon FreeTime Unlimited starts at just $2.99 per month for
Prime members and $4.99 per month for customers who are not yet Prime
members. The FreeTime Unlimited subscription can be used on Fire
tablets, including Fire Kids Edition tablets, Kindle e-readers,
Android phones and tablets, and iOS phones and tablets. Families can
also use their FreeTime Unlimited subscription to access FreeTime
Unlimited on Alexa, an all-new Alexa experience for kids and parents
with over 300 Audible kids’ books; kid-friendly, ad-free radio
stations and playlists; character alarms; and premium Alexa skills
from Disney, Nickelodeon, National Geographic, and more. FreeTime
Unlimited on Alexa is available on compatible Echo devices, including
Echo Dot Kids Edition, Echo, Echo Dot, and Echo Plus.
The Tools Parents
Want, When They Want Them
Over 10 million kids
(and their parents) have enjoyed the award-winning Amazon FreeTime
service, which provides the perfect balance between giving kids the
freedom of choice and unlimited access to the content they love,
while providing parents peace of mind knowing that what their kids
are viewing on their device is age-appropriate. Amazon FreeTime
offers world-class parental controls that encourage learning before
play, and give parents the ability to adjust their child’s FreeTime
settings, including:
Weekday and
weekend settings—parents can set time limits by weekdays and
weekends.
Bedtime—parents
can control when FreeTime shuts down for the day and turns back on
the next morning.
Educational
goals and time limits—parents can set daily limits or restrict
certain categories, such as apps and games, while leaving unlimited
time for reading.
Learn
First—parents can block access to entertainment content until after
educational goals are met each day.
Total screen
time—parents can choose a set amount of total screen time per day,
after which the tablet will shut down for the day.
Age
filters—parents can adjust settings to tailor the FreeTime
experience for each child and ensure the content their kids are
viewing is age-appropriate for them.
Add or remove
content—parents can add titles from their own content library into
FreeTime, or choose to remove unwanted FreeTime Unlimited content.
Enable the web
browser—parents can choose to enable or disable the kid-friendly
web browser within FreeTime.
Additionally, Parent
Dashboard continues to provide new and helpful ways for parents to
manage their child’s screen time and connect with them over the
digital content they’re viewing in FreeTime. With Parent Dashboard,
parents simply log-in to parents.amazon.com from any web browser to
access:
Daily activity
reports—parents can view the digital content their kids are using
in FreeTime and determine how to manage time limits and educational
goals.
Remote parental
controls—parents can adjust their child’s FreeTime settings
remotely, including adding content from their personal library,
setting daily goals and time limits, enabling the web browser,
pausing the device, and more—all without tracking down their
child’s device.
Discussion
Cards—similar to a family book club, parents can access summaries
and sample questions based on the books, videos, educational apps and
websites that are viewed within FreeTime. Discussion Cards also
provide ideas for ways to connect online experiences with real-world
activities, such as “volunteer at the local animal shelter to help
homeless dogs and cats.”
“We hear from
parents how important it is to have the tools they need to make
decisions about their child’s screen time,” said Kurt Beidler.
“We work hard to provide parents with those tools so they can stay
connected to their child’s digital experience, including FreeTime
parental controls and Parent Dashboard, which make it easy for
parents to participate in their child’s activity and adjust tablet
settings remotely.”