View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] Re: Alexa
...I know a lot of people, including myself, that use Alexa. It's useful, especially for someone with ADHD. In fact not having Alexa in DC was incredibly frustrating.But then we had a CRT TV up until COVID. We tend to be Luddites overallhttps://quotidianpeace.wordpress.com/

This message was edited 7/23/2023, 8:40 PM

vote up2

Replies

Oh, I'm not exactly on the cutting edge myself. I will never speak to a machine at all, unless I'm forced to. When some automated system on a phone call asks me to "enter or say" a number, I pull up the keypad and key that sucker in.
Just saying, the echo thing isn't a very successful product overall, it's not expanding - and so I think the human Alexas of the world will see their problems decline in the future.Do you say "Alexa" or do you use a different wake-word? Personally I'd change it but if you didn't think of that before, it's probably too late to change the habit.
Question for anyone - if you HAD to use a voice assistant, and address it with something other than "computer," or the name of a company associated with it, or any corporate-assigned name like Alexa, Siri, or Cortana - what would you use as the "name" or wake-word?
vote up1
We use Alexa for mine (living room), computer for Xander's (office), aha Echo for M (her room, used only for music.,)
I was really against Alexa up to a few years ago. M really wanted one and her grandparents asked if there could get her one. I said yes reluctantly - and the damn thing has helped.It's got our calendar, reminders, and routines. If allows me to keep up with things, and the morning reminders get us out of the house. And it lets M contact us if she needs to - she doesn't have a phone yet and if old enough to be left alone.Alexa is all I do, no other smart home tech. Too much could go wrong, and Alexa invades my privacy enough.
vote up1