Amazon event september 2018 echo alexa speaker news – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Amazon is having its second annual fall hardware event to showcase all the latest in Echo and Alexa-integrated products. If you didn’t think five different Echo form factors from last year’s event was enough — in addition to spinoffs like the Echo Look fashion camera — it’s time to get ready for even more ways Amazon will put Alexa in your home. There will also be updates to current Echo speakers that will add new finishes and a larger screen on the Echo Show. From smart kitchen appliances like a microwave with a built-in Alexa to an update that turns all your Echo devices into a home security system, here are all the latest from the event in Seattle.

  • Sean O'Kane

    Sean O'Kane

    Amazon’s Echo Auto is another quick fix for the broken state of in-car infotainment

    Amazon’s new Echo Auto — a $50 credit card-sized box that sits on your dashboard and brings Alexa to your car — is a lot of things at once. It’s a relatively cheap way to smarten up a car that might not have a snazzy infotainment system. It’s a new beachhead for Amazon in the automotive world, which the company has focused increasing attention on over the years. It’s also another place for you to yell at Alexa to order more toilet paper.

    What the Echo Auto really is, though, is a symptom of the messy state of in-car software.

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  • Cameron Faulkner

    Cameron Faulkner

    Amazon’s new Alexa-ready products are now available for preorder

    The new Amazon Echo Show
    The new Amazon Echo Show
    The new Amazon Echo Show

    At its 2018 hardware event in Seattle, Amazon announced several new Alexa-powered A/V devices, smart home products, and a few others that fall outside of the company’s usual wheelhouse. It was a mix of brand-new and updated products, and the biggest announcements include the redesigned Echo Dot and Echo Plus, the Echo Sub subwoofer, Amazon’s Echo Auto, and the Fire TV Recast cloud DVR box.

    Many of the products announced today are up for preorder, most of which will be available in October. There’s plenty to dive into regarding the huge list of product debuts, and we’ve got you covered if you’re looking to place a preorder (or 10).

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  • Dieter Bohn

    Dieter Bohn

    Amazon Fire TV Recast hands-on: a very smart and elegant DVR for cord cutters

    I just got a quick demo of the Amazon Fire TV Recast. It’s a shoebox-sized thing you can put in your home to have a DVR that works with over-the-air channels that it receives via antenna and displays on your Fire TV (or Fire tablet). Like the Slingbox back in the day, the idea behind the Recast is to allow you to watch both live TV and stuff that you’ve recorded from anywhere.

    There have been a million different weird takes on how to get TV content to act more like streaming content, so I should probably slow down a bit and explain exactly what the Recast is and how it works.

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  • Chris Welch

    Chris Welch

    The 14 biggest announcements from Amazon’s surprise hardware event

    Photo: Dan Seifert / The Verge

    Today Amazon held a hardware event that was loaded with new product announcements. We got new Echo speakers, a new Echo Show, and even a microwave.

    In many ways, the sprawling event was a showcase of how far Alexa has come in the four years since Amazon’s voice assistant was first introduced in 2014. The technology has evolved far beyond its early capabilities on the original Echo speaker.

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  • Chaim Gartenberg

    Chaim Gartenberg

    Amazon is putting Alexa into every car with Echo Auto

    In its now second annual hardware event, Amazon today announced Echo Auto, an in-car accessory that allows you to integrate Alexa into your car.

    There are a couple of ways customers can already access Alexa in the car — you could download an Alexa app, buy accessories or even a Moto Mod, or drive cars with the software built in. But the Echo Auto makes it far easier to integrate Alexa into any car, regardless of whether your automaker included it or not.

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  • Shannon Liao

    Shannon Liao

    Amazon Fire TV Recast lets you send live TV streams to your device

    Photo by Dan Seifert / The Verge

    Amazon announced a new Fire TV Recast today. It’s a box that can beam shows from an antenna to your device through Fire TV. All you need to do is place the box in your home, and start streaming on your Echo Show, Spot, Fire TV, or on mobile.

    A feature in the app will help you determine where to put your antenna for the strongest signal. Fire TV Recast can be integrated into the channel guide, so you could watch with Prime Video and even PlayStation Vue. You can also watch local news and shows from channels like ABC, The CW, and NBC.

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  • Dani Deahl

    Amazon is making it easier to set up new Internet of Things gadgets

    Amazon is introducing a new way to make setting up any smart device as easy as plugging it in. Called Wi-Fi Simple Setup, the system will use Amazon’s Wi-Fi Locker to store your Wi-Fi credentials and share them with compatible smart home devices.

    Amazon is debuting this tech with TP-Link and Eero, with the idea that customers can reuse network credentials in order to set up new devices. This means devices will connect on their own instead of you having to manually set up each smart product. According to Amazon, it’s as easy as plugging in a Wi-Fi Simple Setup-enabled device. The device will automatically look for the Wi-Fi Simple Setup Network and connect once it receives encrypted credentials. Amazon says the process should take no longer than 30 seconds.

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  • Ashley Carman

    Ashley Carman

    Amazon updates Ring Stick Up Cam with same $180 price tag

    The Verge

    Amazon announced today that it’s planning to release a new Ring Stick Up Camera. It’ll come in two versions: wired and battery-powered. The wired version includes an Ethernet port. It’ll be released in black and white and works both indoors and outside. It’s now available to preorder at Ring.com, Amazon, Best Buy, and Home Depot for $179.99. It’ll start shipping on October 18th.

    Ring already sold a Stick Up Cam; this is just an update. The prior model also worked indoors and outdoors and could withstand temperatures between -5 degrees Fahrenheit and 120 degrees Fahrenheit. It also recorded 720p video and allowed for live streaming through the Ring app. The new cameras have an IPX5 waterproof rating, meaning they can handle rain, and they now record 1080p video.

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  • Jacob Kastrenakes

    Jacob Kastrenakes

    Amazon is turning the Echo into a security system

    Amazon is adding a few new features to the Echo that turn it into one of the basic pieces of a smart security system. Since Echo speakers are always listening, they’ll be able to start listening for the sound of broken glass, or for a smoke or carbon monoxide alarm to go off. If it hears those sounds while you’re out of the house, it’ll be able to send a notification to your phone; or, if you have a supported professional monitoring system, send it directly to the service monitoring your home.

    The feature set is being called Alexa Guard. It won’t be working at all times — instead, you’ll have to enable it when you leave the house, by telling Alexa that you’re leaving. Once you do, it’ll start monitoring and be ready to send you alerts.

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  • Chaim Gartenberg

    Chaim Gartenberg

    Amazon introduces a redesigned Echo Show with a larger 10-inch display

    Amazon has just announced an all-new Echo Show at its Alexa event. The new device features a larger 10-inch display and gets rid of the weird chin from the first-generation device, along with offering a smart home hub inside and a new fabric back cover (bringing the design in line with the other new Echo devices it announced today.)

    Also new are revamped speakers, with the updated Show now offering dual, side-firing two-inch neodymium drivers that replace the front-facing ones that were below the screen on the older model.

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  • Nick Statt

    Nick Statt

    Amazon announces $60 Alexa-powered microwave with a Dash button for popcorn

    Amazon has officially announced a microwave oven, the company’s first kitchen appliance product. The device will be sold under the AmazonBasics line, and it will cost $59.99 and ships starting November 14th.

    Naturally, it will come with voice-activated presets, so you can inform the microwave how you’d like to cook something and for how long by simply using an Alexa wake phrase and then a duration or a phrase like “frozen vegetables.” The microwave also comes with a built-in Alexa button, so you can avoid saying “Alexa” or “microwave” and simply verbalize the desired cook time or the preset.

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  • Chaim Gartenberg

    Chaim Gartenberg

    Amazon’s Echo Wall Clock is a physical display for your Alexa timers

    Image: Amazon

    Amazon has just announced the Echo Wall Clock, a new Echo accessory for displaying timers you’ve set with Alexa in a more visible way.

    The Echo Wall Clock uses a ring of LEDs around the clock face to show your active timers. Start a timer, and an LED will show how long the timer is set. Add a second timer, and it’ll light up a second LED for that. As an added bonus, the Echo Wall Clock can change the time automatically for turning on or off daylight saving time.

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  • Shannon Liao

    Shannon Liao

    Alexa Hunches can now suggest actions based on daily behavior

    Dan Seifert/ The Verge

    Amazon is now launching Alexa Hunches, where the voice assistant will predict your future needs. It uses deep neural networks to understand behavior and Alexa Hunches is first going to focus on the smart home.

    How it works is that Alexa will feel like it’s getting a “hunch” and if it’s confident enough, it will say something like, “Hey, I think you left the porch light on, would you like me to turn it off?” Alexa could also remind you to lock the front door if you haven’t already when you say “Goodnight.”

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  • Jacob Kastrenakes

    Jacob Kastrenakes

    Amazon announces $25 smart plug that lets you control appliances with Alexa

    Amazon is announcing another small new Alexa device today: a smart plug that lets you control whatever is plugged into it with Alexa. The plug doesn’t have microphones built into it, so you’ll need an Echo device somewhere else in your house to control it by voice. But once it’s set up, you’ll be able to control it either in or out of the house from Alexa or the Alexa app.

    The plug will sell for $25, which is pretty much the standard price for this kind of device. There are a ton of smart plugs out there already — many of which already work with Alexa, and most of which support multiple smart home systems, giving them an advantage over this device — but Amazon thinks this product can stand out because of its setup. Amazon says it’s built a simple, automatic setup process into Echo devices, and this smart plug is one of the first devices to support it.

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  • Jacob Kastrenakes

    Jacob Kastrenakes

    Amazon’s Echo Input adds Alexa to any speaker

    Amazon is introducing a small new device that you can plug into any existing speaker to turn it into an Echo. It’s called the Echo Input, and it includes far-field microphones on it just like a normal Echo would. But instead of including its own speaker, it’s supposed to plug into or pair with another speaker, so that Alexa gets added to an audio setup that’s already in your home.

    The device will sell for $34.99 and launch later this year in the US, UK, and Germany. Amazon also says it’ll be bundled with some third-party speakers, including Bose, allowing customers to turn them into smart speakers straight out of the box.

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  • Dieter Bohn

    Dieter Bohn

    Amazon announces Echo Sub, Echo Link, and Link Amp to fully take on Sonos

    In Amazon’s second (perhaps now annual) surprise Alexa event, it is making a bigger push into the home audio space with the Amazon Echo Sub. As was leaked yesterday, it’s a 100W subwoofer that is meant to supply the bass for a home audio setup. It can be paired with two “of the same compatible Echo devices” for full stereo pairing, and it will be controlled with the Alexa app or with your voice.

    It ships later this month, available for preorders today. It costs $129.99.

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