Anonymous wrote:I love it in the kitchen. I use it as a timer, to play NPR and music, call up facts, check weather, etc. My mom shares a lot of recipes with me that use the Imperial measuring system and I use it to ask, for example, how many cups are in a pint, etc.
I also like that my kids can listen to audiobooks without having to be on a screen-based device.
These responses are interesting to me. I have no interest in an Alexa, somewhat for the creepiness factor but mostly because everything people say it does for them, I already do in other ways and function just fine. I don't see why Alexa is so revolutionary, frankly. Haven't people been doing all of this forever with smartphones or just notepads?
I use my phone or my laptop for everything this PP mentioned (except a timer -- for cooking I use the stove timer and for everything else I use my $15 casio watch). My house is small and we have one set of speakers in the living room, not bluetooth or anything, just hooked up the old fashioned way to a stereo that has a CD player and an ipod doc. From the living room you can hear the music perfectly well in the dining room, kitchen, and side room, which is the extent of the first floor. If you turn it up a bit you can hear it upstairs too. I have a pad of paper in the kitchen for writing grocery lists as items are needed. We don't have smart anything in the house except our phones and a Firestick, which is used only for the TV. The thermostat has its own timer if we want to use that, which we usually don't bother with; and there is no way in hell I'm putting a digital lock on my front door. And if I want to yell something to my kids upstairs I can do that without benefit of a device.
My SIL has an Alexa in a space even smaller than ours (apartment, not house) and she never uses it except when we come over -- and that's because my kids love to play with it. I just don't see the point.