For context, I’ve tried both Siri and Google Assistant before. It always feels awkward to yell at my phone, and there are very few situations where it’s faster or more convenient.
That plus the privacy concerns, especially if you have the voice activation feature enabled, is more than enough for my to never use them again.
I didn’t say they should use it or buy one. Just to try it out because the voice skills work very well, with the addition of lots of badly paid Amazon workers correcting the machines when they didn’t understand you.
You can try out things without owning them. You can also buy electronics and stop using them. I have an Alexa speaker because I wanted to see how it worked, I wanted to take it apart and look at the near field/far field microphones and I wanted to analyse network traffic while idling, while muted and in standby with Wireshark. You can’t do that without having the hardware. I don’t use Alexa to control my appliances and I created a separate VLAN for that bug.
If I just wanted to try it, I could ask a person I know with an Alexa if I could. Or I could order it and send it back. Or I could get one at work and use it there.
For context, I’ve tried both Siri and Google Assistant before. It always feels awkward to yell at my phone, and there are very few situations where it’s faster or more convenient.
That plus the privacy concerns, especially if you have the voice activation feature enabled, is more than enough for my to never use them again.
Try Alexa, I think it’s the best iteration of smart home assistants right now.
I wouldn’t buy and use it, though. I don’t want my credit card data leaked to capitalist wage slaves.
Recommending Alexa, is like recommending to make money on the street if someone needs quick buck :P
I didn’t say they should use it or buy one. Just to try it out because the voice skills work very well, with the addition of lots of badly paid Amazon workers correcting the machines when they didn’t understand you.
I think your first sentence doesn’t go very well with second one. But I think I get what you wanted to say…
You can try out things without owning them. You can also buy electronics and stop using them. I have an Alexa speaker because I wanted to see how it worked, I wanted to take it apart and look at the near field/far field microphones and I wanted to analyse network traffic while idling, while muted and in standby with Wireshark. You can’t do that without having the hardware. I don’t use Alexa to control my appliances and I created a separate VLAN for that bug.
If I just wanted to try it, I could ask a person I know with an Alexa if I could. Or I could order it and send it back. Or I could get one at work and use it there.
Edited my initial comment ITT to reflect that.
Oh, well, yes I agree. I was thinking about more typical usage, like just connecting Alexa device to a wall, wifi and daily using it (for some time).
Edit: on second thought: it is still an quite hostile device under your roof in which you live (talk, etc).