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Amazon Kindle Fire Silk browser ported to other devicesUbergizmo

In case you didn’t already know, Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet comes with its very own web browser: Silk, which is touted to improve surfing speeds by compressing web sites before sending them to your device. This means pages will be smaller, and will consume less data and speed up load times when browsing on the tablet. While the feature is already available in browsers like href=”http://www.opera.com/mini/” rel=”homepage” target=”_blank” title=”Opera Mini”>Opera Mini, for those of you who want Amazon’s browser instead, you’re in luck.
The folks over at XDA-developers have managed to extract the browser from the tablet and ported it over to non-Kindle Fire Android devices. It has been reportedly working on the devices like the href=”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Atrix_4G” rel=”wikipedia” target=”_blank” title=”Motorola Atrix 4G”>Motorola Atrix and href=”http://phones.verizonwireless.com/droid/x/” rel=”homepage” target=”_blank” title=”Droid X”>Droid X, but it’ll require a rooted phone in order to work. Head over to the thread at XDA-developers for the files and instructions on how to get it working on your phone/tablet.

Simranpal Singh

With a decade-long journey in the tech industry, I've been actively engaged in tech reporting across various reputable publications. He currently works as a Web Developer at RightNode Media and pursues his hobby of writing on GoAndroid. Enjoy travelling, and always excited about new tech trends. He actively contributes on GizmoChina and GChromecast Hub.

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