Amazon Said to Plan Premium Alexa Speaker With Large Screen (bloomberg.com) 84
Amazon's Echo speakers have garnered a lot of interest over the past few months. Many people believe that they like Amazon Echo because of how easy it's to operate -- there is no display, you talk with Alexa, Amazon's digital assistant, which is reasonably good at understanding your queries. But in what seems like a deviation from the idea that made Echos so popular, Amazon is reportedly working on an Echo-like speaker, only this time it is more premium and has a 7-inch display, too. From a report on Bloomberg: The new device will have a touchscreen measuring about seven inches, a major departure from Amazon's existing cylindrical home devices that are controlled and respond mostly through the company's voice-based Alexa digital assistant, according to two people familiar with the matter. This will make it easier to access content such as weather forecasts, calendar appointments, and news, the people said. The latest Amazon speaker will be larger and tilt upwards so the screen can be seen when it sits on a counter and the user is standing, one of the people said.
Re: yea what could possibly go wrong??? (Score:2)
Funny. We know that it's you guys in the alt right that pretend to work yourselves up about eugenics even though you want basically the same thing but through genocide. Bezos has never favored eugenics -- you know it, I know it. What's your game man? About surveillance, why don't you ask your soon to be government not to expand surveillance like many in the incoming cabinet have said they lwant to do.
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Where do you get that the anonymous coward is alt-right?
It's usually the left worried about corporations over-extending and abusing the rights of its consumers.
Or now that a republican is back in office is it corporations evil than government?
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alt-right is just a generic insult that doesn't mean anything anymore. It's a way to play certain cards while avoiding the stigma of being someone who pulls those same cards in every discussion.
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Re:What could I possibly use it for? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've bought pretty much all my audio CDs from Amazon (well, CDNow, originally) since about 1997. I buy a lot of music on disc. Turns out it's kind of hard to pirate contemporary classical music. In any case, I had a massive library of content available through Amazon's Cloud starting from the day they announced that everyone's music purchases would be put in there. That stuff just plays through the Dot. That's kind of great, really. I say "Alexa, play Kevin Puts And Legions Will Rise" and Kevin Puts plays. "Alexa, play Pandora; Alexa and set a sleep timer for 30 minutes." and I get a half hour of music random music.
Something else that's great? "Alexa, give me a news briefing" No more timing my shower so I catch the news at the top of the hour while I'm getting ready for work.
I can do that stuff about 10 different ways in my house, but the voice activation is legitimately handy. Especially since it's one step closer to getting to be Deckard in the middle of Blade Runner. Easily worth $50, anyway.
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I've bought pretty much all my audio CDs from Amazon (well, CDNow, originally) since about 1997
That's the problem with this. It's only useful if you put your eggs in one basket. If it could connect to my NAS and index my ID3 tags and stream my own local library, that would be truly useful - I don't want to pay them to store music far away just to cost me more bandwidth.
Not a problem (Score:2)
Nope. Amazon is perfectly agreeable with you downloading the music you buy as well as making it available for you to stream via the dot and sister devices. They make it trivially easy.
You can do whatever you like with your music as purchased from Amazon. I download everything I buy. There's even a bulk-download capability. it's awesome.
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They make it trivially easy.
If you pay for the storage and put it in their basket. If you own CDs or MP3s from elsewhere, you must pay to store it with them - you can't stream it locally.
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They actually do have sane free limits. However, they seem to "match" to deduplicate and use their own copy [google.com] unless you manually make exceptions for each song...individually. And that's no good if you meticulously correct your metadata and add high-quality album art (or your preferred cover for an album with multiple releases).
This problem also exists with Amazon and Apple, but at least with Google it's free.
Re: What could I possibly use it for? (Score:2)
I pay $2/month on top of Prime for functionally unlimited (250,000 tracks) music storage. I'm ok with that. I also have a 144TB file server in my spare bedroom that has all the music I could ever dream of hearing on it and a bunch of Kodi devices where I can play content. But you you know what I can't do with that stuff? I can't talk to it and have it do something.
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But you you know what I can't do with that stuff? I can't talk to it and have it do something.
And that's because Amazon won't support that, not because they can't. And paying money to store something I already have stored is not something I will do no matter how cheap. I also have my own metadata entered and don't want it replaced with Amazon's, since they do matching and de-dup (maybe won't matter as much on a device with no GUI).
I'm glad you have something that works for you and no one is taking that way from you. But most people don't want disparate walled garden silos. I would much rather bu
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I've bought pretty much all my audio CDs from Amazon (well, CDNow, originally) since about 1997. I buy a lot of music on disc. Turns out it's kind of hard to pirate contemporary classical music. In any case, I had a massive library of content available through Amazon's Cloud starting from the day they announced that everyone's music purchases would be put in there. That stuff just plays through the Dot. That's kind of great, really. I say "Alexa, play Kevin Puts And Legions Will Rise" and Kevin Puts plays. "Alexa, play Pandora; Alexa and set a sleep timer for 30 minutes." and I get a half hour of music random music.
Something else that's great? "Alexa, give me a news briefing" No more timing my shower so I catch the news at the top of the hour while I'm getting ready for work.
I can do that stuff about 10 different ways in my house, but the voice activation is legitimately handy. Especially since it's one step closer to getting to be Deckard in the middle of Blade Runner. Easily worth $50, anyway.
A high-quality microphone that is always listening and voice recognition are useful right up to the point where they are used against you.
Oh, what's that, version 2 of this hardware will give you video calling support? Gee, an always-on video camera...can't think of a better thing to pair with an always-on microphone.
And people wonder why I still buy CDs to play in my old "dumb" hardware...
Test... tickle. Is this mic on? (Score:2)
Oh, you mean that smartphone you've been carrying in your pocket for years now? That high quality microphone? That voice-recognition? That always-on connection to the world?
The Echo and Amazon brethren are the least of our problems here. Also, as currently implemented, these devices recognize their names locally, and then talks to the world. I have watched the network tra
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Wow. That's neat. In return for those cute little gimmicks, Amazon has a complete recording of everything that happens in your house. And, then they sell that to other companies. You're OK with that? Really?
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You must be half deaf then, because the quality of the Alexa speaks for playing music is horrible. And you know what - the brain needs to have some rest. The instant gratification of doing 10 things at a time is nothing more than addiction. There is this concept called mindfulness, check it out, it really improves your life, though I'm afraid if your only spare time to get some news is in the shower, you may not have any. Stop giving in to all this BS all the corporations are trying to put you into. Take yo
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It is interesting that after you mentioned it I had to scroll practically to the bottom of the Amazon product page to find that indeed the dot has 3.5mm jack. Definitely outside of the area I would look for that.
It is not in the product photos on the top, but still there is no information for the DAC or if there is a toslink integrated into the 3.5mm jack. Amazon really failed marketing this properly at least to me.
I've interacted with the original tall echo speaker and was really disappointed by that.
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Like all Alexa, utterly pointless.
Like all "Telephone" products, utterly pointless.
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Like all Pet Rocks, utterly pointless.
/ Pet Rocks are great for throwing at home invaders.
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A tablet? (Score:2)
Did Amazon just invent a tablet?
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Did Amazon just invent a tablet?
Sounds more like the tablet equivalent of an old fashioned console TV.
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Did Amazon just invent a tablet?
A future version promises the ability to call people, and be small enough to fit in your pocket.
speaker with screen (Score:2)
Now the only thing left to try to decode is what the freaking hell "this time it is more premium" means. Maybe they will make a less premium, a pre
Another spam ad (Score:1, Flamebait)
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I am not a shill and I have a Tap because a friend of my had an Echo and I loved it, mostly b/c I use Prime Music a ton and my young kids can easily interact w/the device to play what they want. Several of my friends have purchased the devices after using mine.
I mean, popular? No, not nearly as much as Amazon may like you to believe; however, they are pretty great devices for what they are and I think the recognition software is world's better than Siri (which, IMO, is completely and utterly useless and I n
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So very sorry that as an active user of the devices my experience is counter to your opinion.
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Or maybe anecdotal, personal samples are not representative? I've seen a Surface and an Echo up close outside a store.
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So, if the binary guy (10010110 whatever) wants to smugly pretend that the world revolves around his own personal life experience instead of
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Right so how exactly is this different from a Fire 7" tablet, and perhaps a Bluetooth speaker nearby? Well other than having a bigger speaker in an integrated unit that is.
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Screen stays on, wall power. Always-active voice control. I can see a use for something like this, but I can't see a use for the way Amazon wants to do it.
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There IS a kitchen market. I currently have speakers in my kitchen that I connect to an iPod, with the eventual plan of a Pi with a touch screen taking its place. Cutting vegetables or stirring a pan can get boring. I do hate using a phone for research/recipes because I constantly have to unlock it and turn the screen back on.
However, their product is not going to catch on. They're making yet another walled garden in a post-AOL world. If it doesn't connect to your other gadgets and the home tech ecosys
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Key word being products. Not DLNA / SMB / HLS or any standard streaming / file access / media sharing standards. Only if it's a retail standalone product.
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And also, it's hard to call cloud-based hardware "home tech." Amazon's devices aren't connecting to devices on your LAN directly at all.
Good Digital assistants? (Score:2)
I haven't tried them. Are any of these particularly useful? Will they act as hands free interfaces while driving? Can they truly parse human language? If I ask it how much a ten inch by ten inch by ten inch cube of water weighs, can it put together an answer?
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Or better yet, ask it whether there's a way to reduce the total entropy on the universe.
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Android's combined with Android Auto (in a car that supports it, or now with your phone if you have it mounted) is pretty good. No, it can't parse human language at all. It's like playing King's Quest by voice. There's a dictionary of set commands and some variation in syntax allowed. It's not without its bugs, but it's really useful in the car. One physical touch to play a voicemail/text/hangouts/facebook message, and you can reply by voice, including punctuation (if you want), and verify before sendi
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And after that.... (Score:2)
The next iteration after that will feature a keyboard and a pointing device! Amazon will eventually take us back to using a desktop computer.
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The next iteration after that will feature a keyboard and a pointing device! Amazon will eventually take us back to using a desktop computer.
No, the next iteration will feature a CAMERA.
Think about it.
Echo is a top 5 Electronics Purchase In Our House (Score:2, Informative)
I'm surprised by the negativity in these /. posts. Do you all own an Amazon Echo? I can honestly say that the Echo in our kitchen gets more use than our TV's and and Stereos. So if I were to rank our non-work related tech usage by hours each day:
1) iPhones (of course)
2) Laptops and iPads
3) Amazon Echo
4) TV's
5) Various CD/MP3/Radio/Stereo players
We use the Echo for music, news, kitchen timers, weather, podcasts, jokes, etc. I probably use the "flash news briefing" the most, followed by playing music. When yo
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"Alexa Play Pandora Fallout Boy", "Alexa how many tablespoons are in a cup"
I'm struggling to figure out which of these two is the more retarded request.
Big Brother is watching you! (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd love to know the point of these things (Score:2)
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You must really like hearing about Trump. WTF is with this need to be updated on 'news' every few minutes when it's the same shit that the media has been chomping on for the past month?
Or perhaps you're just an Amazon marketing bot. In which case, carry on....
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The main obstacle to making such a thing isn't Amazon. It's that there isn't a big enough market for large e-ink displays to create a mass market for them. As a result, the displays are very expensive, and the result is that such an e-reader is too expensive to be popular.
Another problem is the lack of color. Many current textbooks use a lot of it.
Finally, there is the competition from tablets. If a large e-reader costs as much as a Microsoft Surface, most people will buy the Surface instead because it does
IoT Prank (Score:2)