Otago Daily Times

Echo device could save your bacon

- By JIM ROSSMAN

MY wife and I have a few Amazon Echo Dots (smart speakers) in our home. We have them tied to our home automation system so we can control our lights or thermostat through Alexa’s voice control.

Whenever I show off Alexa (a voicecontr­olled intelligen­t personal assistant service) to a visitor, they almost always wonder how they would use such a device.

My parents now have two Echo Dots in their home, and they have quickly adapted to having Alexa turn on a few of their lights. My mum even subscribed to Amazon Music so they could ask Alexa to play their favourite tunes.

One of the Echo’s features we are learning about is the ability to make and take voice calls.

The Echo Calls and Messages feature started as a way for people to make a voice call from one Echo to another or from an Echo to anyone with the Alexa app on their smartphone or tablet.

I think Echo calling is a neat feature, but it was a bit limited at first.

Calling other Echo users is pretty neat, but it seemed a little gimmicky.

You could also use a feature called ‘‘Drop In’’, which lets you start a voice call with another Echo without the other person having to answer the call. The Drop In feature is off by default, so you have to enable it for each device you’d like to use.

This could be handy for keeping track of elderly friends or relatives if they haven’t checked in for a while.

Alexa really got interestin­g when Amazon introduced calling phone numbers.

Did you know you can just ask Alexa to call a phone number and she’ll connect you?

There is a contacts section of the Alexa app on your phone where you can sync your phone’s contacts to the Alexa app so you can just say, ‘‘Alexa, call mum’’ and if there is a contact in your app for mum, the call will start.

Amazon is using the internet to place the calls. You can specify in the Alexa app whether you want your cellphone number to appear as an outgoing caller ID number, but you don’t have to have a number show.

Of course, these are speakerpho­ne calls, and with the nice array of microphone­s on each Echo device, the voice quality is pretty good.

In fact, I got to thinking about how well those Echo microphone­s can hear. I can speak in a normal voice from my kitchen, and the Echo Dot in the living room can hear my commands.

Our house isn’t huge, but the three Echo Dots we have can pick up our voices from anywhere in the house.

With Echo Calling, the devices are now very useful for making an emergency phone call. If you fall and break your leg, instead of having to drag yourself to wherever you left your phone, what if you could just say, ‘‘Alexa, call Jim’’ and you can talk from wherever you are in the house?

There are several brands of medical alert systems you can wear around your neck or on your wrist. Alexa could only be used if you fall within voice range of an Echo, but a few strategica­lly placed Echoes in your home can make calling for help a lot easier.

You can’t use Alexa to call 111 using Alexa Calling. But if you have a landline or a Voice over IP service, you can buy an Echo Connect to make a connection between your phone line and the Echo devices in your house.

With Echo Connect, you can dial 111 because the address informatio­n from your phone line will be transmitte­d to 111 when you call.

Google Home has virtually the same callmaking functional­ity. — TCA

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