Amazon’s strategy has typically been to use its device announcements to do market research about a product’s viability. A year ago, the company announced a home robot named Astro that it has yet to make widely available to all consumers. The same goes for a flying indoor security camera unveiled two years ago. 

While Wednesday’s event was focused on hardware, Amazon’s underlying proposition is its software. As always, the new gadgets nudge customers toward the company’s digital offerings—e-books, health and wellness content, streaming video and more.

Kindle Scribe: A Tablet for Reading and Writing

The Kindle, until now, has had a singular purpose: display digital books and periodicals purchased through Amazon. The Kindle Scribe adds writing capabilities. It’s a leap in functionality and price. While standard Kindles start at $100, the Scribe will start at $340 when it becomes available later this year.

 

On the new $340 Kindle Scribe, you can annotate e-books and imported documents, or take notes in a new notebook app.
Photo: Amazon

Over the years, Amazon has added lighting for improved contrast and nighttime reading, Bluetooth connectivity for audiobooks and, more recently, water-resistance. The Scribe includes all of that, in addition to a larger 10.2-inch display, an included pen, a new notebook app and the ability to take notes within Kindle content.

There are two stylus options: a basic pen that magnetically attaches to the side of the Scribe, and a premium pen that also includes a dedicated eraser and a programmable action button. Neither pen needs to be charged or paired.

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You can add sticky notes to specific pages in e-books and annotate imported documents. The notebook app includes a to-do list and lined paper template, and any notebooks created on the Scribe will be backed up to Amazon’s cloud storage without additional charge.

Many tablets have compatible styluses and offer drawing capabilities. But their tablets have power-hungry color displays that are harder to see outdoors. The Scribe has three-week battery life for note taking (up to 12 weeks if you only use it to read) and its colorless display is glare-free in direct sunlight.

I’m looking forward to seeing how the Scribe compares to e-ink tablet competitors. The ReMarkable 2 has a fantastic handwriting experience, but doesn’t support Kindle books. Onyx’s Boox can run the Kindle Android app, but I had to jump through hoops to install it.

Halo Rise: A Wake-Up Light That Tracks Your Sleep

Amazon introduced Halo, a wrist-based health tracker, in 2020. Its latest Halo device isn’t a wearable, but a $140 sleep tracker/alarm clock. The Halo Rise, available later this year, is designed for nightstands. The device has a digital clock face and a semicircle of lights that can gradually increase in intensity before your alarm goes off.

 

The $140 Halo Rise is part wake-up light, part sleep tracker, with an embedded radar sensor that can assess your sleep quality.
Photo Illustration: The Wall Street Journal, Amazon (2)

To reduce the creep factor, Amazon didn’t use any cameras or microphones. Instead, the Rise has a low-power radar sensor that measures body movements, such as your chest rising and falling as you breathe. (Google’s Nest Hub also uses radar to detect sleep patterns.) Halo Rise only begins recording sleep movements when the environment is dark and you lie down to sleep. If you’re in bed reading, nothing is captured. The sleep data isn’t used for product recommendations or advertising, the company says. And anyone in bed with you won’t be tracked.

The existing Halo app can show your time asleep, differences between light and deep sleep and an overall sleep score. Temperature and humidity sensors tell you if the room is too humid or hot for comfortable sleeping. If you enable the Rise to work with Echo speakers, you can ask Alexa how you slept and get a brief spoken report.

Echo Updates: Eero and Auto Integration

Amazon executives have said the company is focused on technologies that affect the real world, such as ambient computing and artificial intelligence. The company’s Alexa virtual assistant continues to rule over Amazon’s priorities.

The new Echo Dot ($50) and Echo Dot with Clock ($60) have improved audio quality and a temperature sensor. The digital clock version also has a more interactive screen. In addition to the time, it can display information such as upcoming calendar events.

But more notably, the smart speakers can now act as mesh Wi-Fi points, extending coverage of Amazon’s Eero routers by up to 1,000 square feet. Amazon will bring that Echo-Eero functionality to last year’s fourth-generation Echo and Echo Dot as well. While this will seem like a free gift to people who already have both, it’s also a way for Amazon to use its products’ popularity to box out competitors.

The company announced a second-generation Echo Auto ($55), a small device that mounts to a car dashboard and adds Alexa capabilities while driving. It’s smaller than the previous version, and it can now call roadside assistance and pick up music or other audio where you left off on other Alexa devices.

 

The Echo Auto is an in-vehicle device that puts hands-free Alexa in your car—and requires a connected smartphone.
Photo: AMAZON

Since the first one didn’t live up to its potential, we’ll reserve judgment until we can try this one ourselves. The device relies on a smartphone for connectivity, and with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto nearly ubiquitous in newer cars, is there still a need for an in-vehicle Alexa?

New Features for Fire TV
 

The $35 Alexa Voice Remote Pro will ring when you ask Alexa to ‘find my remote.’
Photo: AMAZON

The Fire TV experience is coming to last year’s large Echo Show 15 smart frame as a software update. Translation: You can now stream content from other major services such as Paramount+ on the wall-mounted display. You still can’t do this on smaller Echo Show devices.

There’s a new Alexa Voice Remote Pro ($35), which will be sold separately for Fire TV streaming devices. It has a backlit keypad and a remote-finder feature. You can now ask Alexa to locate the remote—a feature that alone is worth trading up.

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