
Amazon Echo with its Alexa voice-based personal assistant has made quite an impression on our household including my children. Elbrie has enjoyed using Alexa at our house and asked me to put together an overview of how the Amazon Echo experience works in practice in a family.
It's important to note that Alexa has been designed for adults and teenagers rather than children and there are no parental controls at this point. There also doesn't seem to be a way to give permission for COPPA compliance in the US for voice recordings to be stored for under 13s (Alexa stores voice recordings of commands.) For families with older children you should definitely have a discussion and make sure that they understand that their voice will be recorded and that parents (as account owners) will be able to listen to historical commands. You'll also want to explain Alexa to guests.
Overview
When talking about Alexa rather than to her we try and remember to refer to her as 'she who cannot be named' to avoid confusion.
Organising us with Alarms
Talking Information Service
In our house 'google it' has been partially replaced with 'ask Alexa'. This works particularly well when we're eating a meal. We've never had a rule about no devices at the table, it's never come up, we just don't. But now we do ask Alexa things that help with our conversation.I have no idea how we got on to the subject but recently the kids wanted to know how old Queen Victoria was when she died. Alexa was able to tell them and also let them know that she died at Osbourne House on the Isle of Wight (we've been there.) If we hadn't followed that up straight away then we would have forgotten about it and they wouldn't have made that connection.
My 8 year old loves asking Alexa for facts about whatever he's interested in. Our Amazon Echo is in a shared family room so my son doesn't have unsupervised use. My kids seem more interested in testing Alexa's knowledge of Mongolia than asking anything inappropriate. YMMV.
Music
Since we got our Amazon Echo we've played a lot more music. We've tried lots of ways to share our music in the past, but the Amazon Echo has been the most successful.Personally the times when I want music on are when I'm not at a computer - when I'm cooking, doing housework, playing with LEGO, etc. It's much more convenient to use voice commands.
My kids have very different tastes in music and when we first got Alexa they did spend some time changing the music back and forth to their preference! But this has settled down over time and we take turns to choose music.
Shopping
The shopping feature that we use the most is just adding things to a shopping list via voice commands. This shopping list isn't connected to a store, I just check it when I place a supermarket shopping order for delivery. This is so convenient as you usually realise that you've run out of something when you're not at a device.The kids can also add things if they use the last of something. We've had some hilarious experiences when Alexa hasn't recognised the item we've requested and added something entirely different to the list, but overall the voice recognition works pretty well.
You can also use Alexa to shop for Amazon Prime items. You'll be pleased to know that you can set up a pass code for voice ordering so that the kids can't order every Skylander ever made. Of course this means that you can only order things when your kids aren't listening. I enjoy shopping via the website and tend to consider and research every purchase so I don't think I'll be using this feature much.
Home Automation
We don't have a standard set up but my partner was able to integrate it pretty quickly. This is fantastic! We can control the lights, curtains and blinds and more using voice control. Even better we can just ask Alexa to 'put the kettle on.' (We're British, life is punctuated by cups of tea.)
We've often been asked how kids and home automation go together. People seem to imagine that kids would spend all day opening and closing curtains with the button. They don't. It becomes normal and mundane to them. Voice control is the same. There's an initial novelty when they try turning the lights on and off but after than it just becomes the normal way to do things.
Speaker and Microphones
The Amazon Echo has a 360 degree speaker which works really well for us. We've got it positioned so that it can be listened to from most of our open plan living area. We've been pretty impressed with the sound quality and it's plenty good enough for causally listening to music.You can choose the smaller Echo Dot which only has a basic speaker and hook it up to your own sound system via a cable or Bluetooth. For us it made sense to go for a combined device as we didn't have a suitable speaker in a central location. We've only got one device to worry about, it just works.
The microphones (Echo has 7) work from multiple directions. I can add things to the shopping list from the kitchen, the boys can ask Alexa questions when we're eating a meal and we can ask Alexa to put music on when we're all in the living room. There's no need to walk up to Alexa.
Voice Control
Alexa Skills
You can get Alexa to order food for you, teach you stuff, talk you through an exercise routine, quiz you and lots more.
Parental Controls
Alexa with Fire Tablets
We expect that this is because Amazon hasn't worked out what to do about parental controls for Alexa yet (other than purchasing.) Alexa really appeals to children so we're hopeful this will change in the future.
Overall Experience
It's early days for working out how children and voice control go together in terms of privacy and parental controls.
