Have fun with it! We started with one Echo in the kitchen, which started out as my daughter’s Christmas present last year. The whole family started using it mostly for music. Siblings’ music tastes conflicted so of course they would argue over what to play. Earlier this year, I saw a deal for the Alexa Dot ($30) and Echo ($80), so I bought one Dot each of the kids’ room and have since found more uses for Alexa. Had the price not been reasonable, I would not have bought it. This deal is back again for the holidays.
Here’s a few things we have used Alexa for:
•Stream music from your phone/tablet via bluetooth, Pandora, others.
•Questions: Tell me a joke, what’s the weather in ___ city, what’s the time in London, Sing me a Halloween song, etc. There’s an email I get every month with fun questions or facts you can ask Alexa.
•Alexa App: You’ll need to download to set up the device anyway. I use the app more than my husband does.
o **Setup**: Definitely go into the app and update your settings so that someone else from your contacts who also has Alexa cannot ‘drop in’ (intercom) you. I haven’t tested dropping in on someone outside of my house so I don’t know what safeguards, if any, are there.
o Skills: You can enable skills to allow Alexa do more: daily news, meditation, math games, stories, jokes, daily inspiration and more. Just like apps you’d download for your phone/tablet, some skills work well, others didn’t. My kids & I had fun with a ‘pick your own journey’ story (Magic Door). I haven’t had time to checked if the skills have improved in a while.
o Intercom: “Drop In” feature allows you to automatically connect to the device and start chatting. Alexa makes a sound before it connects. How this has been useful: I’ve used Alexa to call my pre-teens out from their room. I can intercom them from anywhere, inside the home or while driving home from work.
•Smart home: I recently bought smart plug that I named ‘Mommy’s light’. I hooked the lamp on my nightstand to this plug. It has been great in the middle of the night to just say, “Alexa, turn on Mommy’s light” rather than fumble half asleep for the switch. Recently, Amazon has a good special where Echo or Dot is discounted plus you can buy a smart plug for $5.
•Call: If you allow it access to your phone’s contacts, you can use it to call someone. I only used that feature once just to test it out. If someone calls (versus ‘drop in’) your Alexa, Alexa rings until you tell it to answer the call. I haven’t used this much.
•Intercom: If you have two or more Alexa, you can ‘drop in’ in on each other. I thought I would not need an intercom. I thought my voice was loud enough to call my kids from their room. Boy, was I wrong. Put a pre-teen in a closed bedroom with a book or electronic or nothing, they are great at ignoring mom. Enter Alexa, “Hellloooooo… Take your headphones off and come downstairs to eat.”
•Reminders/Alarms: My kids have been asking Alexa each morning to remind them when it’s time to leave to go the bus stop (‘Alexa, set an alarm for 7:20am.’).
•Audiobooks & Ebooks: Let me start by saying that I am not an avid book reader. When I do, I typically prefer a book that I can hold. With kids in sports, activities, homework, etc., I’ve started using listening/reading books to help pass the time.
o Public Library: My recent obsession. With our library card we have free access ebooks and audiobooks via OverDrive apps. In Overdrive, there’s the option to read the ebook using the Kindle app.
o Kindle: You can have Alexa read your Kindle ebook. Since it’s Alexa reading, it sounds robotic and you lose a lot of the voice inflections. Depending on the book, I can still follow along while cooking or whatever. When I am ready to read the ebook on my phone, it knows where I’ve left off based on how far Alexa has read (or Alexa starts reading where I left off in the book).
•Calendar: I have everything scheduled on Google calendar and allow Alexa to read my phone’s calendar. Now when the kids/hubby asks if we have anything today, I tell them to ask Alexa.