Watch the Made by Google launch event in 15 minutes
Google unveiled its plan for consumer hardware earlier today, showing off Pixel phones, the Google Home hub, Google WiFi router, Chromecast Ultra and Daydream VR headset, plus its Assistant AI ready to tie everything together. We liveblogged every second of the full presentation, but if you’re in a hurry you can catch a quick runthrough of all the announcements right here in just 15 minutes, or head straight to our hands-on impressions.
GOP website outed its response to the VP debate a bit early
Today the Republican National Committee showed tech companies aren’t the only ones to get a little jumpy with the publish button. Following Apple’s early Twitter leak of the iPhone 7, the GOP website pushed up blog posts declaring its VP candidate, Mike Pence, the “clear winner” of a debate against Democratic candidate Tim Kaine, before the debate actually began. The content has since been pulled but lives on in screenshots as the debate goes on live. Of course, a CMS timing error can happen to the best of us, but maybe this is one election data leak that won’t be attributed to emails or foreign hackers.

The GOP has already posted on their website a blog post entitled “5 Questions Tim Kaine was NOT Asked”
Oops? pic.twitter.com/JuPPCo61xF
— Steve Kopack (@SteveKopack) October 4, 2016
Source: CBS, Deadline, The Atlantic
ComiXology Originals are precisely what they sound like
Taking an, ahem, page from Netflix and parent company Amazon, Comixology is working on its own line of original, exclusive comics, aptly named comiXology Originals. And they don’t seem priced too far out of line against offerings from Marvel and DC. When Adventure Time Marshall Lee Spectacular and the four-part Valiant High arrive they’ll run $3.99 each. Marley’s Ghost (a graphic novel take on Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol) will set you back $9.99, according to The New York Times.
“We want to make sure there is a comic for everyone,” co-founder and CEO of the service tells NYT. “If it’s super successful and becomes its own thing, hallelujah. But we’ll continue to experiment to attract new readers and hit the core [user].”
TechCrunch writes that you can pre-order these right now, with Adventure Time and Valiant High coming out next January and Marley’s Ghost next October 15th. Presumably, they’ll be available via the all-you-can-read Unlimited subscription.
Via: The Verge
Source: New York Times
With Assistant, Google is becoming a lot more like Apple
Google may have finally taken control of its hardware with the new Pixel phones, but the company’s still focusing on software. In particular: artificial intelligence. The AI-powered Assistant is an integral part of its new phones, Allo messaging app and smart speaker, making for a more uniform and useful experience across all of Google’s (and other brands’) devices. If that sounds familiar, it’s because Apple brought Siri to multiple platforms first.
Assistant brings voice control to the new Google Home smart speaker, in addition to the new Pixels, and lets you control your Chromecast playback with your voice. The goal, said the company’s CEO Sundar Pichai, is to make Assistant “universally available.” This means we can look forward to more integrations across other Google products, possibly including Chromebooks and Android wearables.
Imagine a not-unlikely future where you can use Assistant on your wrist to tell your Chromecast to pause Netflix when you go to the bathroom. You could even get rid of those Netflix socks altogether. Since Android Wear already offers built-in OK Google capability, it’s not a stretch to imagine that being supplanted by Assistant. Again, that’s similar to what Apple already allows for with Siri on Apple Watches and MacBooks. And just as Google is bringing its Android OS to televisions and (possibly) laptops, Apple has software that is the same (or very similar) across its TV, phone and tablet operating systems. It’s one platform for all devices.
The iPhone maker has long been criticized for its closed ecosystem, as Google has been hailed as a crusader for open platforms. But while Android remains an open OS, Assistant’s rollout is reminiscent of other Apple tools such as HealthKit and HomeKit, where developers get access to APIs a period of time after launch. Of course, Google doesn’t appear to have the intention of blocking access to Assistant’s code, and unlike with HealthKit and HomeKit you can build Assistant into your own hardware. But it’s worth noting that it’s implementing features in a way that’s more like its rival.
I’d be remiss if I overlooked the couple other players in the digital assistant space. Microsoft is making Cortana accessible and uniform across its phones and desktops, but it doesn’t have the breadth across product categories to take on Google and Apple. And although Amazon’s Alexa currently doesn’t exist in phones or laptops, it’s in a variety of speakers (Echo and Tap), the Fire TV and third party devices like this quirky smartwatch, and is catching up to Siri in what it can do and control.
Google’s method has one glowing difference that sets it apart: its approach to and expertise in artificial intelligence. The Assistant showcase comes after a slew of announcements about machine learning, including those around translations and image recognition, that evidence the tech giant’s commitment to AI. And while Microsoft and Amazon themselves have pretty advanced artificial intelligence, and are farther along there than Apple, Google’s history of being the world’s favorite search engine (and basically being in everyone’s business) provides a wealth of knowledge of user behavior and gives it quite the edge. It has more historical data to refer to and more information to train its machine-learning systems on, which should make it smarter, faster.
Pichai said the company intends to create a “personal Google” for everyone — a search engine-powered helper that knows exactly where all your pictures, receipts and emails are, as well as all of your upcoming events and their locations and how to get there. Although it may be later to the party than Apple was, the popularity and proliferation of Google’s services, as well as its AI prowess, could very well make Assistant the digital helper of choice.
Apple Discontinues Apple TV 3
Apple has discontinued the third-generation Apple TV, removing it from its online store. Additionally, links to the Apple TV 3 now reroute to the fourth-generation Apple TV. Apple confirmed it was discontinuing the device in an email to employees and educators obtained by 9to5Mac.
The Cupertino company will continue to fulfill backlog orders for the device, but is now putting its attention behind the newer fourth-generation device. In early September, it was reported that Apple had begun phasing out the Apple TV 3, pulling it from its brick-and-mortar stores
The Apple TV 3 was released in 2012 and given a spec bump the following year. In fall 2015, Apple announced the long-awaited fourth-generation Apple TV, including support for Siri, the brand-new tvOS, and the App Store.
Apple is still selling refurbished versions of the Apple TV 3 for $59. The fourth-generation Apple TV can be purchased from Apple’s online and retail stores in two configurations: 32GB for $149 and 64GB for $199.
Related Roundups: Apple TV, tvOS 10
Buyer’s Guide: Apple TV (Caution)
Discuss this article in our forums
Google Home, Google Wifi and Chromecast Ultra hands-on preview

Google expanded its presence in the Home with Chromecast Ultra, Google WiFi and, oh, Google Home.
Among Google’s announcements at its Pixel event in San Francisco were three pieces of in-home technology that on their own are interesting, but together are hugely noteworthy.
In addition to the Google Home assistant-in-a-speaker, which was announced at Google I/O earlier this summer, the company unveiled a streaming stick, the Chromecast Ultra, and a brand new mesh-enabled Wi-Fi router called, appropriately, Google Wifi (yes, lowercase i). Let’s break them down a little.

Google Home
This is the first time we’re seeing Google Home, and it’s quite the compact little speaker. With magnetic replaceable bases made of metal or fabric, the unit can be made to stand out (a bright red flourish, for instance) or blend in (a nondescript slate metal) depending on the environment, and because they’re magnetic they can easily be exchanged for various situations.
The slanted top is certainly a bold decision, but it definitely feels like something Google can get away with. The top is also touch-sensitive, and features a set of four dancing lights in the Google color scheme when a command is issued.
While the testing environment wasn’t conducive to extensive testing, Google Home promises to be attentive and sensitive, able to hear a voice from across the room using far-field microphones. With Google Assistant built in, Home becomes a place to ask questions and solve problems, or just access information directly from Google Search. The upside is that Google’s “knowledge graph” is in many respects the world’s vastest and, with your permission, Home can access personal information culled from Maps, Gmail and more.
To convey those details, Home also sports a speaker — a 2″ driver and dual 2″ passive radiators for deeper bass — which sounds better than we expected, but it’s not going to replace your Sonos Play:1 for music playback. What it can do, however, is reach into YouTube, Google Play Music, Spotify, Pandora, TuneIn and more to access tracks and podcasts, which is pretty great, and there are more services to come. There’s also support for IFTTT and other smart home platforms like Nest, SmartThings and Philips Hue, so you can turn off your lights and turn on your thermostat with one command.

While Amazon’s Echo has a pretty invested developer community, this is Google, and it’s safe to say that after years of building developer relationships for Android’s Google Play Store, Home should gain a lot of traction very quickly. Google is already planning that future with Actions, an SDK for developers to plug into Google Assistant, which works on Home as well as the Pixel phones.
At $129, Google Home appears to be a bargain, and a loss leader that Google is looking to capitalize on, not only to get Assistant into as many homes as possible, but to show off the multi-room synergies with Chromecast, Chromecast Audio, and the new Pixel phones. This is an ecosystem, folks.
Look for Google Home at the beginning of November.
See at Google

Chromecast Ultra
The Chomecast Ultra is a Chromecast, but better. Google demoed a number of 4K experiences for us at the event, and they looked great, with limited buffering and no skipping to speak of. Of course, much of that smoothness will depend on your broadband speeds and Wi-Fi bandwidth, but Google’s got a trick up its sleeve for that: an ethernet adapter that attaches directly to the Chromecast Ultra’s HDMI port.
Being nearly twice as fast as the previous Chromecast, it can handle 4K Ultra HD streams and HDR content, where supported, which is great to see.
At $69, the Chromecast Ultra isn’t cheap, but it isn’t replacing the existing Chromecast, which is highly resembles. Look for it in November.
See at Google

Google Wifi
Google Wifi is perhaps the most vexing announcement of the day. Alone it’s a small puck whose user experience resembles that of the OnHub that was announced last year, but when paired with one or more friends, or an OnHub itself, it creates a mesh network that, according to Google, creates “fast Wi-Fi everywhere in your house, not just right next to the router.” Each puck is AC1200 compatible, with 2×2 Wave 2 MIMO support and dual-band 2.4/5Ghz compatibility. On the back are two ethernet ports, one for a modem and one for a switch or something else.
Google Wifi itself is fairly nondescript, and considerably smaller than the OnHub routers from TP-Link and ASUS released last year, but the value proposition is the same: easy setup, and no maintenance. Plugging in a Google Wifi to your modem is the only thing you need to do, aside from pairing with the app that is set to unify with Google On later this year.


When paired with an OnHub or another Google Wifi puck, Wifi creates a seamless mesh network that we hope truly solves the problem of dead spots throughout homes — my home is full of them, even with an OnHub. The good news is that OnHub isn’t going anywhere, and Google is working hard to make sure it and the new set of Wifi products work well together. Google also promises new features for both later this year, once Wifi has launched, including Family Wi-Fi, which allows parents to pause connectivity on kids’ devices.
Pre-orders for Google Wifi are expected in early November, starting at $129 for a single puck and $299 for a set of three.
See at Google
What do you think?
They’re not as flashy as the Pixel phones, but these products represent a Google that is thinking beyond the handset, or the operating system — it’s thinking of how the handset and OS are the center of a wide range of products in the home that enable continuous connectivity using either voice or touch.
We’ll have lots more on Google Home, Chromecast Ultra, and Google Wifi in the coming weeks, so stay tuned.
Google Pixel + Pixel XL

- Everything we know so far
- New navigation buttons
- Google UI + circular icons
- Android 7.1 Nougat
- Pixel vs Pixel XL
- Older Nexus phones
With Google Home and Google Wifi, we’re finally getting a proper smart home foundation

Google Home and Google Wifi aren’t going to be able to fix the Internet of Things. But they will try to make it smarter and point it in the right direction.
The Internet of Things — many of us have a less-kind name for it — wasn’t going to be fixed in a day. It wasn’t going to be fixed in the blazing sun in Mountain View in May, when Google first announced its plans for Google Assistant and Google Home. And it wasn’t going to fixed today when Google announced more details of its long-awaited (I’d say “overdue,” really) competitor for the Amazon Echo.
And it’s not going to be fixed a month from now, when Google Home ships. Or a little later in the year when Google Wifi joins it. No. The Internet of Things is vast and complex, and we’re lucky to have a hub that manages to even loosely wrangle all those things together.
That’s what we’ve got with the Echo — with “Alexa” — today. We’ve got a semi-smart connected speaker that, while having seen its intelligence grow by leaps and bounds over the nearly two years of its short life, still remains shackled by the fact that Amazon isn’t Google, and you’re only as smart as what you know. Alexa tends to hit that wall quicker than you’d expect.
Amazon isn’t Google, and you’re only as smart as what you know. Alexa tends to hit that wall quicker than you’d expect.
And that’s where Google has always had the leg up. What Google does — especially these days in the new era of “machine learning” — is about intelligence. And that’s where Google Assistant comes in. We’ve only gotten a taste of it so far, in the not-quite-a-must-download Allo messenger app. But you can be sure this new iteration of Google Now (RIP) is a major part of the future of Google as a search company. Ask and it’ll answer. Command and it’ll obey.
While the list of initial IoT partners is small — Philips Hue, Nest, Samsung SmartThings, and IFTTT — it runs the gamut, for sure. And that list certainly will grow once Google opens the APIs to more developers later this year.
And while we still have a good bit of exploring to do once we get Google Home into our homes, it already appears that it’ll be able to control all our things at least as well as Echo, if not better. If you’ve got Philips Hue lights and ever tried to have Alexa change the color, you’ll know what I mean.
And finally, there’s the simple fact that Google Home is a traditional Google Cast target. That is, if you can play it on your Android device you can have Google Home play it instead, via the Cast protocol, and not have to deal with the vastly more clunky Bluetooth.
Amazon Echo isn’t dead, though. Far from it. Amazon is still a shopping destination unlike any other in this part of the world. And so it can plaster its own products on its pages better than Google ever can. (And it wouldn’t surprise us in the least to see Google Home banned from its pages just like Chromecast was.)

That’s the nozzle on the hose, though. Google hasn’t forgotten about where the water comes from in the first place, with Google Wifi. A single router is fine for a lot of uses. But as we connect more and more things in the farthest reaches of our homes, it’s just not good enough.
(And a note to those who work to change our lives: At some point we probably should talk about how the two-plug outlets just aren’t going to cut it anymore, either.)
Google Home and Google Wifi have shortcomings at the outset, but they’ll grow over the coming months as is the Google Way.
Instead of one single point of broadcast, we’re encouraged to use multiple smaller — and smarter — routers in a mesh network. If that sounds complicated, know this: the Google On app that’s controlled its OnHub routers (and soon will be renamed to Google Home as well) is excellent. It’s as simple as it is smart and is a breath of fresh air for anyone who’s dealt with a more traditional router admin panel. (Of course, if you even know how to get into your router you probably can handle the UI, but that’s another thing for another time.)
And price is as important as simplicity when it comes to something you’re supposed to purchase in multiples. Shelling out $299 for three Google Wifi units isn’t quite an impulse buy, but it’s also a good chunk cheaper than the competition. And it also means that my garage will be as covered as my living room.
Current OnHub routers won’t be hung out to dry
Those of us who own one of Google’s two OnHub routers — those sort of random releases from 2015 — got a bit of good news in our inboxes. They’ll work just fine with Google Wifi.
It’ll require a software update, but everything will run on the same Google Home app, and you can use the Google Wifi units to extend your current network if you don’t want to blow things up and start from scratch.
Score one for the good guys.
So we now have a more intelligent way to connect to the internet in Google Wifi. And Google Home finally brings the intelligence of Google out of our pockets and into our homes.
And whatever shortcomings Google Home and Google Wifi have at the outset, you better believe they’ll grow over the coming months.
The question, as always, remains whether Google will be able to sell them in any numbers in the first place.
Pixel keeping some exclusive features when other phones get Android 7.1

We don’t yet know all the details about Android 7.1. But we do know what features are specific to a Made by Google Pixel phone.
Whether you were impressed at what was shown at the Google Pixel launch event or not, there was surely a thing or two shown by the Google Hardware team you really liked. While they were focused on showing what the Pixel phones can do, there wasn’t much talk about what was part of Android 7.1 and what was specific to the Pixel phones themselves.
Other than a mention, not much detail about Android 7.1 was made available at the event. We expect to see the new branch in the source code tree and all the developer documentation soon, and until then we can’t know the full list of changes or features. But we do know several things shown that are specific for the Pixel and Pixel XL, as well as a few of the features that are part of the new Android version.
What makes a Pixel a Pixel
Let’s start with what is going to be a feature of the phones themselves. The one that is quickly noticeable is the launcher. The opaque shelf and round folders (as well as the wallpaper picker) are not part of Android and remain a Google application. There was no word on whether the launcher would be made available for other phones through Google Play or if it will replace the current Google Now Launcher. Off the record, I’m hearing yes it will be available, and no it won’t replace the current app. This makes sense because of Google Assistant.
The Pixel’s features come from various sources — the hardware, the newest version of Android, and some just because the Pixel is Google’s baby.
As of today, the Pixel and Pixel XL are the only phones that can use Google Assistant outside of the Allo app. If you want to use Google Now on Tap (if that even remains as an option) and use Google’s launcher you can stick with the existing Google Now Launcher. Replacing it in a way that works differently with different models seems counter-intuitive, and the backlash over round icons because of a forced change would be valid. I just hope the dynamic Calendar app icon finds its way to phones not using the Pixel-style launcher.
The next Pixel feature is Google’s 24-hour tech support service. If you buy a Pixel or Pixel XL, you can call or chat with a trained representative right from the device settings. There is even an option for remote administration, and I’ve been assured that enabling this feature is optional. This is similar to what Samsung and Motorola (as well as other manufacturers) have been doing for a while. Samsung and Moto also offer a way to easily migrate from another brand to their offerings, as does the Pixel with its Quick Switch feature (and dongle).

Another feature getting a lot of attention is the unlimited full-resolution photo and video backup. If you use a Pixel phone, you have unlimited storage through Google for an online backup of every photo and video you take with your phone — and they aren’t downsized or compressed in any way. Even full-length 4K videos. The Smart Storage option will offload images and videos from the phone’s storage to your personal cloud automatically when your phone’s storage starts to get full. Anyone who is using a Nextbit Robin will tell you that this is pretty great if you take a lot of pictures and videos.
Taking 4K video with your phone is great. Having free storage for the ones you end up keeping is awesome.
Finally, there are a few cosmetic differences — things like blue accents and custom navigation bar icons — that are part of the Pixel and not part of Android 7.1.
There are also a few features that are part of the Snapdragon 821 and not the next version of Android. Support for the EVS codec through the X12 LTE modem will mean excellent voice quality for VoLTE calls. The new Aqstic audio codec enables 192kHz/24bit audio playback through the Pixel’s headphones. Improvements to the Spectra ISP in the Snapdragon chipset are a big part of the excellent camera. These are features any vendor using the Snapdragon 821 will be able to incorporate.
Android 7.1 brings its own list

As of this writing, Google says that “Nougat-ready” devices will be updated to Android 7.1. There will also be a 7.1 developer preview program sometime in Q4 2016. We’re not about to read too much into that, and hopefully on a day not about the Pixel we’ll get some details. But we do know that some of the features showcased during the Pixel event are part of the next version of Android, as well as some others we didn’t get to see.
Daydream VR got a lot of attention. What we didn’t get are a lot of answers about other phones being able to use it.
The biggest thing here is Daydream VR support. Everything we saw and heard about VR on the Pixel and Pixel XL is because they run Android 7.1. Any phone updating will be able to incorporate the same features. Google tells us that new phones supporting Daydream are coming, but we have no word on any existing phones getting certified. We know that the Nexus 6P is able to be a Daydream targeted device right now, with the caveat that the experience is less than optimal and there is no certification, so the hardware requirements put plenty of other phones in the running, but software is the big unknown.
Fingerprint gestures — things like swiping down on the sensor to open the notification tray — are part of Android 7.1. Google’s Night Light feature — a blue light filter, is coming with 7.1 as are improvements for screen sensitivity and display refresh — the latter being pretty important for Daydream.

Another feature talked about is Seamless Updates. We know that any phone built to run Android 7 or higher can use them, but we also know that unless the device storage is partitioned with Seamless Updates in mind, it can’t be used. Google did make a big deal of it during the launch event, so it’s worth mentioning that the feature is available for everyone.
We still expect plenty of API changes and other features aimed at developers, of course. When we get those full details and the documentation, we’ll talk more about it. For now, we’ll have to be content sparring with each other over the Pixel’s features and price.
Google Pixel + Pixel XL

- Everything we know so far
- New navigation buttons
- Google UI + circular icons
- Android 7.1 Nougat
- Pixel vs Pixel XL
- Older Nexus phones
Watch our Google Pixel hands-on video!
We’ve written the words, now see the video.
We know you can’t get enough of the new Pixel and Pixel XL, and to help you get a better understanding of how the phone looks, feels and looks, we’ve worked up a hands-on video. We’re primarily showing off the “standard” Pixel here, but have several shots of the Pixel XL that show just how similar the two phones are — really, it’s two sizes of one phone.
So feast your eyes on our hands-on video above, and when you’re done be sure to follow that up with a read of our complete hands-on preview for the phones. And if you need even more (we know you do), check out the rest of our comprehensive Pixel coverage!
Google Pixel + Pixel XL

- Everything we know so far
- New navigation buttons
- Google UI + circular icons
- Android 7.1 Nougat
- Pixel vs Pixel XL
- Older Nexus phones
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: What’s the difference?
It didn’t take long for a tech company to copy Amazon Echo.
Amazon’s voice-activated speaker is a critical success, and so it wasn’t too surprising when Google introduced at Google I/O in May that it developed its own speaker called Google Home. Then, at the Made by Google event in October, Google announced some key features for Home, as well as how much it costs and when you can get it. Now you just have to decide which speaker you want.
To help make that process a little easier for you, we’ve looked through all the specs and details and explained the primary differences between Amazon Echo and Google Home. Let us know in the comments which one you think you’ll buy.
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: Design
Google Home’s design was inspired by wine glasses and candles, Google said. Its bottom casing can be swapped out for different shells to match your furniture (there are six shells in fabric or metal). It has a sloped top, with a touch-capacitive display and four LEDs to provide visual feedback. There is only one physical mute button at the back, which you can press to prevent Google from listening to “hot words”.
Amazon actually offers a few different versions of Echo, but we’ll focus on the original, canister-shaped model for this comparison. Echo is a 9.25-inch-tall cylinder speaker with a seven-piece micr array. The outside has perforation for the speaker grille, while the top of Echo has a ring of light that you can turn to adjust volume and buttons for mute and activation. The speaker only comes in black or white colours.
Keep in mind Amazon’s Echo lineup offers tiered-speaker heights that remind us of Starbucks coffee sizes (grande, venti, and trenta). Alongside Echo, Amazon offers two sibling speakers that debuted in March 2016 in the US, called Amazon Tap and Echo Dot, each of which are available at different price points. To learn more about the different models, check out Pocket-lint’s comparison.
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: Voice assistant
Google Assistant
Google Home will let you ask Google anything, thanks to its Google Assistant AI. You will have access to Google’s 17 years of search experience, which allows you to ask specific questions such as “How much fat is in an avocado?” or “What is Draymond Green’s jersey number?” Those types of questions would stump Amazon Echo, but not Google. You can even ask for weather or check Wikipedia.
Because Google Home has Google Assistant, you can be conversational and ask follow-up questions like “Where did he go to college?” Google Home will be able to connect the “he” pronoun to your previous question about, say, Draymond Green (or whoever) in order to serve up an accurate answer. You can also ask complex stuff like “What was the US population when NASA was established?”
Google said Google Home will give you immediate answers each time. Also, Google Home can read the relevant part of webpages back to you. Google Assistant on Google Home is the same as your Assistant on the phone. Data is shared across your Google stuff on both devices. To learn more about Google Assistant, check out Pocket-lint’s in-depth look at the virtual AI assistant.
Amazon Alexa
Similar to Google Assistant, Amazon Echo is another type of Assistant. It is capable of understanding simple commands, or even a series of simple commands, but they’re fairly basic and can’t understand conversations. And the default search engine is Bing. Still, Alexa will play music, provide information, deliver news and sports scores, tell you weather, and control devices.
It will even allow Prime members to order products they’ve ordered before. Alexa updates through the cloud automatically and learns all the time. The more you use Echo, the more Alexa adapts to your speech patterns, vocabulary, and personal preferences. To learn more about Amazon Alexa, check out Pocket-lint’s in-depth look at the digital assistant.
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: Smarthome
Google Home can be a control centre for your entire home, because it has access to Google Assistant. Not only will let you do the basics like set alarms and timers and manage to-do lists and shopping lists, but it will also connect your smarthome devices and includes support for popular network systems. That means you will be able to control smart lights, switches, doors, and more.
At launch, Google Home works with Nest, SmartThings, Philips Hue, and IFTTT. Google Home also acts as a Chromecast receiver. So, with just your voice, you’ll be able to ask Google Assistant to adjust your Nest Thermostat or turn off your Philips Hue lights or fling content via Chromecast to your TV. Google plans to work with more partners so you can control more things in the home.
Thanks to Amazon Alexa, the Echo can also respond to your voice commands and control any Alexa-enabled products, such as lights, switches, thermostats, and more. Simply ask Alexa to switch on a lamp, turn on the fan, dim the lights, or increase the temperature. Some products work directly with Alexa and other smart home ecosystems require a compatible hub.
Featured brands that work with Echo include Samsung SmartThings, Philips Hue, Wemo, Insteon, Wink, Honeywell. You can find a full list of compatible devices and shop for these devices from here on Amazon. Because Echo has been around for a couple years longer than Google Home, it got a head start and already has tonnes of partnerships lined up.
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: Integrations
Google is working with developers so you can control things beyond the home too, such as booking a car, ordering dinner, or sending flowers to a loved one. And the best part is you will be able to do this with just your voice.
At launch, Google Home works with YouTube Music, Spotify, Pandora, Google Play Music, TuneIn, and iHeart Radio. With support for these services, you can ask, “OK Google, play that Shakira song from Zootopia.” Without having to name the song, Home can figure it out and play it from your favourite app. Thanks to Google Assistant and its machine-learning capabilities, Google Home knows you and your preferences.
Amazon has also been working with developers to include support for Echo, and a few of the standout apps include Pandora, Spotify, Amazon Music, TuneIn, iHeart Radio, NPR, Google Calendar, Uber, and Dominos. At the beginning of 2016, Amazon bragged that more than 130 apps supported Amazon Echo and Alexa voice commands. Again, it’s had the time to grow these relationships.
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: Audio
Google Home is a Wi-Fi speaker that can stream music directly from the cloud. Google said it will deliver rich bass and clear highs – thanks to dual side-facing passive radiators – all from a compact form factor. If you prefer, you can send music from your Android or iOS device through Google Cast. That last bit is important because, with Google Cast support, you’ll be able to use Google Home to control other connected speakers.
You’ll even get multi-room playback, meaning you can add one or more Google Home devices to a group of speakers in order to blast tunes throughout your house. But that’s not all: Google Home will let you control your video content. Let’s say you want to watch the latest episode of Jimmy Fallon or some sort of cat video on YouTube. Just issue a voice command to Google Home, and the content will appear on your TV.
Amazon Echo Bluetooth speaker, so it can play music and be controlled from any device that supports Bluetooth audio streaming. It’s a 1.0 channel speaker, meaning that it is a single speaker with one tweeter and one woofer. In our review of the device, we thought Amazon could’ve done better in the sound department. Also, Amazon Echo doesn’t currently support multiroom audio.
Google Home vs Amazon Echo: Price
Google Home is now available for pre-order though Best Buy, Walmart, and Target in the US. It costs $129 and will be available in stores from 4 November. Amazon Echo, in the original form factor, costs $179 (£149.99 in the UK), though you could always get Dot, a smaller, speaker-free, still voice-activated version of the Echo for $50 (£50 in the UK).
Conclusion
This is a real toss up. While Google Home beats out Amazon Echo in terms of offering different colours and finishes, you can get Amazon Echo in different models. Also, Google Home is coming out of the gate with some great partnerships (IFTTT, Nest, Spotify, etc), but Echo already works with many of these and has been building its devices/services portfolio for a couple years.
In terms of audio quality, we really need to test Google Home before we can give a definitive review. However, the fact that it offers Google Cast and multiroom audio support, whereas Amazon Echo doesn’t, is really compelling. Google’s take on an assistant is also compelling. That’s where these speakers really differ. If you don’t care about how many apps are available or the ability to fling content to other speakers and TVs, Google Home might be what you’re looking for, as it features Google Assistant, which seems to really outpace Amazon Alexa.
Again, we need to review Google Home to be sure, but that Assistant feature definitely stands out. It’s conversational and can tap into Google’s 17 years worth of search experience, while Alexa is more simple and can only understand basic commands. Google Home is also $50 cheaper than Echo, though if you really are only interested in voice tech, you can get Echo Dot for $50.



