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Making sense of Amazon’s Alexa spaghetti strategy

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From Hi folks, it’s Brad. Last week, in the span of about an hour, Amazon.com Inc. int

[Bloomberg] [Fully Charged]( From [Bloomberg](   [FOLLOW US [Facebook Share]]( [Twitter Share]( [SUBSCRIBE [Subscribe]](  Hi folks, it’s Brad. Last week, in the span of about an hour, Amazon.com Inc. introduced [70 new devices and services]( to an inundated tech press at its Seattle headquarters. There were new Echoes, an Alexa-equipped subwoofer, a DVR, Alexa for the car—even a microwave. It felt a little like the e-commerce giant was throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what would stick. And “now you can reheat the spaghetti in an Alexa-powered microwave,” [quipped]( my colleague Alistair on Twitter. But this is Amazon, and there’s usually a method behind the madness. So let’s look a bit closer.  Amazon is racing the likes of Google, Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. to position its technology at the center of our Jetsons-like home of the future, where everything from the washing machine to the thermostat can be controlled with voice commands. Amazon helped to pioneer this concept with the introduction of the Echo in 2014. Last week’s new products, designed to extend its advantage, fall into three main categories. The first and most obvious constitutes the new kinds of Alexa-equipped devices aimed at consumers, like better-sounding Echo speakers, a home security camera and a wall clock receptive to verbal commands. The more Alexa stuff Amazon seeds into the market and into our lives, the stronger its case that Alexa—and not Siri or the Google Assistant—has become a ubiquitous new computing platform. In the second category, Amazon wants to get customers to add voice capabilities to things they already own. Thus we have the Amazon Smart Plug, which connects to an outlet and voice-enables any device, and the Echo Auto for your dusty old station wagon, which you may not plan on trading in anytime soon. Finally, Amazon is giving manufacturers new tools like the [Alexa Connect Kit](, a chipset designed to get them to integrate Alexa into their devices. And it’s working directly with carmakers like [Audi]( to build voice capabilities into their vehicle fleet. This strategy, aimed at both companies and consumers, evoked some gruesome memories of trudging to the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas every January, and visiting the tents outside the main convention hall. There, companies like Cisco Systems Inc., IBM, Sony Corp. and Microsoft would invariably show off their idea of a smart home. These visions, where everything from door locks to dishwashers would supposedly be connected to the web, never really took off. One reason is that those companies mainly wanted to license their home networking specifications to appliance makers and make money from sharing in product sales. The appliance makers weren’t interested—they didn’t want to forfeit profits, and customers weren’t demanding that their coffee makers connect to the internet. Amazon, by contrast, is licensing Alexa to developers and manufacturers basically [for free.]( Its business revolves not around licensing proprietary technology to companies, or even really selling gizmos to customers, but getting devices into people’s homes that will serve as gateways to its massive online store, and to services like its streaming music and video catalog. It has also demonstrated that voice control is appealing to consumers. Those old CES displays usually showed homeowners impractically controlling everything from their PC. Even pulling out your smartphone to turn off a light or turn on your air conditioning—a concept introduced by Nest, now a Google subsidiary, back in 2010—isn’t exactly elegant. And just in case appliance makers aren’t persuaded by all this, Amazon also has something of a stick to make sure they fall in line. That’s where the $60 AmazonBasics Microwave comes in. If manufacturers don’t get aboard the Alexa train, Amazon seems to be saying, it just might start making and selling their products itself.—[Brad Stone](mailto:bstone12@bloomberg.net)  And here’s what you need to know in global technology news Richly funded and much-hyped augmented reality startup Magic Leap has a new target customer. It’s biding for [an army contract](.  The iPhone XS and XS Max went on sale last Friday, and despite a higher price and clumsier name, Apple fans are [lining up]( outside stores to get them.  The White House is mulling an executive order that would instruct federal agencies to [open antitrust probes]( into tech giants like Facebook and Google. The order seems to be in very early stages.   Sponsored Content by Coursera Coursera - Are you cloud ready? Cloud computing is becoming the most disruptive force in tech, with $1 trillion in IT spending expected to be affected by the shift to the cloud. Gain the skills you need to get ahead in a cloud-first world with Google Cloud training on Coursera. [Try it today and your first month is free.](   You received this message because you are subscribed to the Bloomberg Technology newsletter Fully Charged. You can tell your friends to [sign up here](.  [Unsubscribe]( | [Bloomberg.com]( | [Contact Us]( Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022

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