Current:Home > MarketsAmazon product launch: From Echo to Alexa, the connected smart home may soon be a reality -TrueNorth Finance Path
Amazon product launch: From Echo to Alexa, the connected smart home may soon be a reality
View
Date:2025-04-12 08:05:06
Corrections & Clarifications: An earlier version of this column incorrectly attributed the source of the generative AI language in Alexa, which is based on a custom language model created by Amazon.
OK, let’s be honest. The concept of a truly “smart” home has always been a cool idea. After all, who wouldn’t want to have things like lights, appliances, and security cameras all automated in an intelligent, organized and futuristic way that also happens to save you hassle, time and money?
The problem is that the reality of smart homes has never been anywhere close to the vision. Instead, it’s a bunch of often difficult to set up individual products that are a nightmare to get working together as a system.
Thanks to some new products just unveiled by Amazon, however, the practical reality of a truly connected smart home is starting to look much more affordable and more mainstream.
At its annual fall product launch event, Amazon showed off several new hardware products, as well as an enhanced Alexa digital assistant and smart home control software updates that make the setup and control of multiple smart home devices significantly easier.
One of these updates is a new mapping feature that uses the lidar features found in the cameras of certain iPhones from the 12 Pro onward to automatically map out the layout of your home.
By opening the Alexa Mobile app and then simply pointing your iPhone’s camera at the various rooms in your home (either all of them or only the ones where you have or expect to have smart home devices) the lidar feature automatically scans and then builds out a map of all the objects in your room.
By opening the Alexa Mobile app and then simply pointing your iPhone’s camera at the various rooms in your home (either all of them or only the ones where you have or expect to have smart home devices) the lidar feature automatically scans and then builds out a map of all the objects in your room.
What you then do is associate your various smart home devices to their physical location in your home. The result is a map of your home — which, by the way, is never sent to the cloud — that makes it significantly easier and more intuitive to know what device or devices you are controlling and see the basic status for all the devices at once. Once the map is created, it can be used on Android phones and iPhones without lidar-enabled cameras.
Amazon also enhanced its Alexa digital assistant with some of the same kind of generative AI features that we’ve seen in tools like ChatGPT. The technology is based on a custom large language model (LLM) created by Amazon and, for now at least, runs on Amazon’s AWS Cloud service. What’s interesting about that arrangement is that it means Amazon can and will bring the new enhanced Alexa to every single Alexa-enabled product all the way back to the initial Amazon Echos.
The new Alexa is more intelligent, more responsive, more creative, and sounds much better, making the experience of using it — either to set up smart home devices or any of the other kinds of Alexa-based voice requests — much easier. You can, for example, simply say “Alexa, I’m cold” or “Alexa, there’s a mess in here” and it will automatically trigger turning up a connected thermostat or turning on a robotic vacuum (as long as you have one, of course!).
While there are always improvements to be made, these enhancements, including the ability to no longer constantly say the “Alexa” wake word when engaging with Alexa, makes the experience of using this new version of Alexa much closer to a natural conversation.
On the hardware side, Amazon also unveiled a new device called the Echo Hub that’s meant to serve as a master control hub for all your smart devices. It will also get access to the new Map View via a software upgrade early next year. The Echo Hub offers many of the features of other Echo Show devices, including the upgraded Echo Show 8 version introduced at this event, but also includes new software capabilities specifically designed for smart home device operation.
In essence, it gives you a single point of easy visual access and control in a way that very expensive smart home controllers have in the past for the most sophisticated smart home systems. Importantly, though, it does that for a very modest $179.
At the moment, you still have to set up all your individual smart devices on your smart phone first. This is unfortunate, as I believe many people would find the process of setting up on a main controller hub more intuitive. Amazon spokespeople suggested this might be possible in the future but isn’t available yet.
In the meantime, when you set up your smart devices through phone apps, the settings and capabilities for those devices are essentially transferred over to the Echo Hub, allowing you to see, control, and automate them from there. The Echo Hub includes support for all the critical wireless smart home standards, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, the new Matter industry standard, and Amazon’s own Sidewalk technology, making it possible to connect to virtually any smart home device you already own or end up purchasing in the future.
The end result of all these advancements is that it’s getting much easier, and more realistic, for the average person to put together and run a powerful smart home system. At last, Jetsons, here we come!
USA TODAY columnist Bob O'Donnell is the president and chief analyst of TECHnalysis Research, a market research and consulting firm. You can follow him on Twitter @bobodtech.
veryGood! (26)
Related
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Al Roker Asks Critics to Back Off Kelly Clarkson Amid Weight Loss Journey
- PEN America, facing ongoing criticism over its response to the Mideast war, gathers for annual gala
- The Daily Money: Is Boeing criminally liable for 737 Max deaths?
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Get Target Dresses For Less Than $25, 40% Off NARS Cosmetics, 30% Off Samsonite Luggage & More Deals
- Donte DiVincenzo prods Pacers' identity, calls out Myles Turner: 'You're not a tough guy'
- FBI, Homeland Security warn of possible threats to LGBTQ events, including Pride Month activities
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Connor Ingram wins 2024 Masterton Trophy for perseverance
Ranking
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Kansas City Chiefs' Harrison Butker References Taylor Swift in Controversial Commencement Speech
- Barge hits a bridge in Galveston, Texas, damaging the structure and causing an oil spill
- Sister Wives' Garrison Brown's Cause of Death Shared 2 Months After Death at 25
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Idaho inmate pleads guilty to escaping hospital after correctional officers are attacked
- The PGA Tour needs Rory McIlroy at his best, especially now
- New study may solve mystery about warm-blooded dinosaurs
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
'If' movie review: Ryan Reynolds' imaginary friend fantasy might go over your kids' heads
Hailey Bieber Gives Glimpse Into Rhode to Pregnancy With Justin Bieber
Body of US airman fatally shot by Florida deputy returned to Georgia ahead of funeral
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
DJ Akademiks, Off The Record podcast host, accused of rape and defamation
US military says Gaza Strip pier project is completed, aid to soon flow as Israel-Hamas war rages on
An Arizona judge helped revive an 1864 abortion law. His lawmaker wife joined Democrats to repeal it
Like
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Who is playing in NFL Sunday Night Football? Here's the complete 2024 SNF schedule
- Ex-Augusta National worker admits to stealing more than $5 million in Masters merchandise, including Arnold Palmer's green jacket