Skip to main content

You can now use Amazon Echo to buy another Amazon Echo

Amazon Echo review top light
Greg Mombert/Digital Trends
In our review of the Amazon Echo, we noted that while the speaker / personal assistant was an undeniably cool product, the lack of integrated features for Amazon Prime members was surprising. Amazon has been working to remedy this, and since the Echo’s launch in November of last year, it has steadily gained more features. And it has now finally added something it should have had all along: hands-free shopping.

Of course, there is a catch. Currently this feature can only be used to re-order items, and it’s only available to members of Amazon Prime. So saying “Alexa, reorder paper towels” will work, but only assuming that you’ve already bought paper towels from Amazon, and that they’re in stock and eligible for Prime.

There is some extra intelligence being applied behind the scenes. If you re-order an item but Amazon Echo doesn’t find a previous order, it will attempt to locate a similar item from Amazon’s Choice. If it succeeds, Echo will notify you of the product it found, tell you the price, and ask if you want to order that instead.

Assuming that neither of the above options work, Echo will simply add the item to your shopping list, which has been the default behavior since the product’s launch.

If this sounds familiar, it’s likely because the functionality is similar to the Dash button that Amazon introduced in March, which allows users to re-purchase single items with the single press of a button. While Dash is handy if you constantly find yourself forgetting to re-order a single item, adding this functionality to Amazon Echo is undoubtedly more useful.

Echo had plenty of useful functions at launch, and has continued to receive improvements thereafter. Last month saw Echo gain the ability to control smart home devices like Phillips Hue and WeMo products, in addition to adding Pandora and support for even more sports scores.

The firmware update adding this new feature began to roll out yesterday, so most Amazon Echo owners should already have it available to them.

Kris Wouk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
The best drama series on Amazon Prime Video right now
The cast of The Expanse.

A subscription to Amazon Prime offers a lot of perks, including access to some amazing shows you can stream via Amazon Prime Video. That collection features a wide variety of excellent series spanning many genres, with critically praised drama projects well-represented among them. The Prime Video library is always changing too, with new shows coming to Amazon all the time. From original shows you won't find anywhere else to compelling programs that earned acclaim elsewhere, here are the best drama series on Amazon Prime Video.

If you've already burned through the Amazon Prime Video catalog and need more ideas, we've also put together a list of the best original series on Amazon Prime Video.

Read more
Both of Bose’s QuietComfort Earbuds II can now be used independently
Close-up of Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II.

Bose is pushing out a software update that will grant users of its QuietComfort Earbuds II (QCE II) the ability to use either earbud independently. At launch, only the right earbud could be used on its own. To get the new software, you'll need to open the Bose Music app and connect the QCE II to your phone. If you don't see a notification to perform the update, check back later in the day as Bose says the updates will be going out on a rolling basis starting February 16.

Once the update is complete, you'll be able to use either just the left or right earbud for listening to content and taking or making calls. You'll also be able to seamlessly switch between your earbuds and if one earbud runs out of battery life or disconnects from Bluetooth, you can continue listening with the other earbud without interruption, according to Bose.

Read more
Apple AirPlay 2 supports 24-bit lossless audio, but you can’t use it
An Apple AirPlay icon hovering above an Apple HomePod speaker.

Apple's wireless platform for audio and video streaming -- AirPlay -- is one of the best ways to play music from an Apple device to a wireless speaker. When at home, on a Wi-Fi network, it outperforms Bluetooth thanks to its wider bandwidth. The conventional wisdom has always been that AirPlay sets a hard limit on audio quality: iPhones and other Apple devices can only transmit lossless CD-quality audio, at 16-bit/44.1kHz, to an AirPlay-enabled speaker, leaving the technology incapable of supporting the higher-res streams now being offered by Apple Music and others.  But it seems that AirPlay can actually do 24-bit audio. Sort of.

The new second-gen HomePod, which Apple released in January, can stream lossless 24-bit/48kHz audio directly from Apple Music, using its own Wi-Fi connection to the internet. This isn't news: Apple added 24-bit lossless playback (via Apple's ALAC codec) to the first-gen HomePod and HomePod mini in 2021, along with Dolby Atmos support.

Read more