The Amazon Fire TV Stick is a $39 device that you can plug into the HDMI port of your TV to stream internet video or play games. It’s a simple device that offers much of the functionality of the original Amazon Fire TV for less than half the price.

But the Fire TV Stick is also a lot slower than the Fire TV box which means it can’t play some games and lacks support for some features such as listening to audio using Bluetooth headphones.

Now it looks like Amazon may have a more powerful Fire TV Stick in the works… although it’s not clear yet how much it’ll cost or just how much more powerful it will really be.

afts

The evidence

Amazon hasn’t officially introduced the 2nd-gen Fire TV Stick yet, but a device called the Amazon AFTS just showed up in the database of graphics benchmarking tool GFXBench. AFTS could stand for Amazon Fire TV Stick.

While it’s possible the specs listed at GFXBench are wrong, or that this isn’t actually a Fire TV Stick, there are a few clues that suggest it really could be Amazon’s next media streaming device.

First up, it features WiFi and Bluetooth, but no GPS, compass, accelerometer, light sensor, camera, or SIM card. You’d expect most phones, tablets or other Android devices to have at least a few of those things.

Second, the AFTS features a MediaTek processor. While Amazon’s original Fire TV uses a Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 chip and the first-gen Fire TV Stick has a Broadcom BCM28155 processor, Amazon does use MediaTek processors for some of its most recent devices: the 4th-gen Fire HD 6 and Fire HD 7 tablets each have MTK8135 quad-core processors.

The specs

OK, so if the GFXBench listing is accurate, what can we expect from the next Fire TV Stick?

  • MediaTek MT8173 1.5 GHz quad-core processor (with 2 Cortex-A72 cores and 2 Cortex-A53 cores… although GFXBench thinks they’re all Cortex-A53 cores)
  • PowerVR GX6250 graphics
  • 1.5 GB of RAM
  • 8GB of storage (give or take)
  • Android 5.1-based operating system

That means the new model would have a higher-performance processor and more memory than the current version (which has 1GB of RAM and a dual-core, ARM Cortex-A9 processor).

It could bring Fire TV-level performance to the Fire TV Stick… although I’ll be curious to know if Amazon also plans to update the wireless hardware to add support for Bluetooth 4.0. The original Fire TV Stick only supports Bluetooth 3.0.

Both of Amazon’s current Fire TV devices also run FireOS 3.0 software, which is based on Android 4.4. Amazon recently began testing Fire OS 5, which is based on Android 5.0. But this is the first time I’ve seen any mention of an Amazon device running Android 5.1 (not counting custom ROMs).

There are some other specs listed which probably don’t mean much. GFXBench says the AFTS has a 6.9 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel non-touch display. But it’s likely that’s just a screen the Fire TV Stick was attached to when the benchmark was running (the reason GFXBench often posts specs for products before they’re released to the public is because people working at the company might run the test on pre-production hardware).

GFXBench also thinks the original Amazon Fire TV has a 13.8 inch, 1080p display.

via WinFuture

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7 replies on “Amazon’s next-gen Fire TV Stick may be coming soon (leaks)”

  1. Seems this might be the specs of the next Fire TV rather than the stick?

  2. Seems pretty beefy upgrade for the stick. I wouldn’t be surprised to see that hardware on a 2nd gen Fire TV itself. Seems like that would be in line for an upgrade before the stick would get a 2nd gen too. No?

  3. But NO, that’s not a quad A53, the MT8173 is dual A72 plus dual A53. The clocks for the A72 were supposed to go up to 2.4GHz but now for tabs and Chromebooks it seems to only be clocked at 2GHz and that’s still plenty fast. Here given the small size it appears to be clocked at 1.5GHz so the perf for the big cores is not bad, kinda like a Snapdragon 810 at 1.8GHz like in the soon to arrive Oneplus or the Exynos 5433 at 1.9GHz in the Note 4- ofc just 2 big cores.
    So on the CPU side it would be pretty great for a stick and this is the first known device with the MT8173 . It also suggests that Amazon might go with this SoC for some new tabs too, hopefully at higher clocks.

    1. Ahh, good catch! I have a hard time keeping all of MediaTek’s processors straight and didn’t notice that GFX might have mislabeled some of the specs for this one.

      1. Here an approximation for how the MT8173 might do at 1,5GHz (if it’s actually at 1.5GHz) vs a good score for the LG G4 https://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench3/compare/2861385?baseline=2841697

        I am very eager to see this SoC in tabs at higher clocks, it should offer a great price per perf ratio, giving us some really nice tabs at sane prices. The GPU should be PowerVR GX6250 (two clusters) and if it doesn’t throttle hard like the GPUs in high end SoCs, it should be fine.

  4. This is good news! I have both; running Kodi. I use the FTV most of the time, and have retired the AFTVS to my kid’s playroom because it’s not a responsive as the FTV.

    1. I have two Fire TV Sticks, and they’re great for videos. But I haven’t even bothered trying to use them for games.

      What I’d really like is a new, cheap model that supports Bluetooth audio. It’d be nice to be able to use BT headphones to watch videos without disturbing anyone around me. I’ve been contemplating connecting a Bluetooth transmitter to the TV just for that purpose, but a new Stick would be a nice alternative.

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