Possibly the best part of the Kindle Oasis is how quickly it becomes essentially invisible it’s so ergonomic, with easily readable text and a glare-free screen with ambient lighting detection and a high enough resolution that you’ll quickly forget you’re using a gadget at all. Amazon even added Bluetooth support for connecting a headset so you can listen to audiobooks, which now integrate much more seamlessly with their printed counterparts for switching between the two. In short, it ticks all the boxes for what an e-reader should do Amazon has taken a long time getting here, but this is finally the Kindle that leaves little to no room for “I just wish it also…” style statements. It also has an IPX-8 water resistance rating, which means you can easily use it while on vacation without having any fear of damaging the thing. It also has a 7-inch display, which is the largest to date on a Kindle barring the absurdly large (but still impressive in its own right) Kindle DX. The new Oasis keeps all its battery in-house, meaning that you don’t need a cover with it to get the full battery life out of the Kindle, as you did with the old one. The new Oasis looks like the original version, but larger – but looks don’t tell the whole story. I’m an unabashed fan of the Kindle, dating back to its earliest days, so take that into consideration, but believe me when I say: The new Kindle Oasis is the Kindle update I’d hoped for, and more. Amazon’s newest Kindle Oasis arrived like the answer to a timely question – mostly because I happened to request an update to the device right before it actually arrived.
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