“It's going to get rooted, and what you do after you root it is up to you,” said Jon Jenkins, director of Amazon's Silk browser project. Jenkins indicated that he wasn't sure if the bootloader was locked or not, but given that the tablet sports a USB port and a mass storage mode, anyone can side-load Android APK program files without having to root it.
Amazon likely believes that it's a losing battle fighting “rooters” given that Barnes & Noble's NOOK Color and HP's webOS-based TouchPad have been rooted and reinvigorated with Google's preferred Android OS. Despite the OS modifications, the Kindle Fire's underlying platform is Android 2.3 “Gingerbread” which isn't exactly tablet oriented. The actual hardware specs indicate that it may have enough juice to power Android 3.x “Honeycomb” — specs that includes a 1 GHz TI OMAP dual-core SoC, 512 MB of RAM and 8 GB of internal storage.
By comparison, the NOOK Color's underlying OS is Android 2.2 “Froyo,” yet it turned out to be a decent rooted tablet for the money much like Amazon's Kindle Fire will.
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