![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The reimagined UI design pares everything down to four main screens, Home, Find, Library and Live, for a more holistic approach to your entertainment. The headline addition, though, is the updated Amazon Fire TV Experience. Dolby Vision isn’t supported, though Dolby Atmos is. The Amazon Fire TV Stick (3rd Generation) maxes out at 1080p HD, but can still process HDR metadata in the shape of HDR10, HLG and even Samsung’s HDR10+. Those looking for 4K and Dolby Vision support will have to look elsewhere. There are volume buttons that will work for your TV, playback controls and general navigation, plus a button at the top that turns the remote into an Alexa microphone for voice search. It’s the same second-generation Fire TV remote that comes with the 4K Stick. The included remote is as handy and compact as ever. Bluetooth 5.0 and BLE are onboard for pairing with Bluetooth speakers, headphones or video game controllers, and there’s the standard 8GB of internal storage for your app collection. The Stick itself is a little shorter than the 4K model but houses the same 1.7GHz quad-core chip. There’s a good chance that the power cable or simply the stick's girth will get in the way of your TV’s other HDMI sockets, so, as ever, Amazon has included an HDMI extender to take your stick clear of the rest of the ports. It’s a gunmetal grey rectangular prism with an HDMI plug on the end and a micro-USB power socket halfway up one side. From a design perspective, the Fire TV Stick (3rd Gen) is hardly a departure for Amazon. ![]()
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