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Xwave echo review
Xwave echo review










xwave echo review
  1. #Xwave echo review drivers#
  2. #Xwave echo review Bluetooth#
  3. #Xwave echo review plus#
  4. #Xwave echo review free#

While stereo pairing is an Echo feature, it can only be done with two equivalent speakers. What you can’t do is pair the two speakers in stereo. We partner a cylindrical third-gen Echo and a new spherical Echo together in a group, allowing us to switch from one to the other easily. The ‘Devices’ tab followed by the ‘Plus’ icon sets up most of these scenarios, and, while we found Alexa most attentive during testing, if you prefer to click rather than vocalise your tune requests, simply tap the in-app ‘play’ icon and use your phone to load up music. You can make Alexa announce that ‘Dinner’s ready’ to every speaker in your home thanks to its intercom feature, or send music to a particular room as a not-so-subtle message – Bruno Mars’ Lazy Song to a room containing a housemate who’s yet to emerge, perhaps. For example, create a “downstairs” group, say “Alexa, play music downstairs”, and your new multi-room Alexa smart set-up obeys. On the app, you can alter your Echo’s EQ levels, give it a name and assign it to a room in your house, or group it with other compatible Alexa speakers.

xwave echo review

Set-up is done using the Amazon Alexa app, which is well-designed and intuitive.

#Xwave echo review free#

Even if you don’t link any music-provider subscriptions, the Echo will play from Amazon Music Free by default – and you’ve always got TuneIn radio too. It’s easy to get the Echo up and running using your smartphone (you must enable Bluetooth) and wi-fi, and once you’ve linked your streaming service accounts, it'll play music from Amazon Music Unlimited (of course), Apple Music, Spotify or Deezer over wi-fi. For us, there’s not much in it – and the service here is greatly improved thanks to an impressive range of third-party services, including BBC, The Guardian and Pointless smarts in the UK. on the device), starting with an all-neural speech recognition model that should process requests faster and make Alexa even more responsive, ‘learning’ and understanding more about you over time.Īs long as that concept doesn’t scare you off completely (you can turn the Echo’s mics off whenever you want), your preference between Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa will likely come down to compatibility with other products in your home. With AZ1, powerful inference engines can run ‘on the edge’ (ie. The Echo includes Amazon’s AZ1 Neural Edge processor, an all-new silicon module purpose-built for accelerating machine learning applications.

#Xwave echo review drivers#

While the Echo is physically smaller than the brick-shaped Google Nest Audio, its drivers are marginally bigger, and you get one more of them – the Nest Audio houses only one 19mm tweeter and one 75mm woofer. It’s different the same cannot be said of other competing, blend-into-the-background smart blobs currently on the market. The new Echo’s design is nothing if not a conversation piece. The purpose of the latter is to help you set up new devices quickly and extend the working range of things, such as Ring Smart Lighting, that may be beyond the capabilities of your home wi-fi.

#Xwave echo review Bluetooth#

Alongside its built-in Zigbee smart home hub (previously only seen in the Echo Plus), there’s support for Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) and Amazon Sidewalk.

#Xwave echo review plus#

The drivers in the new Echo are the same size as those found in the Echo Plus and the outgoing third-generation Echo, but you now get two tweeters rather than one. Like the older Echo Plus, it now features what Amazon calls ‘premium adaptive sound’, allowing it to sense the acoustics of your space and fine-tune audio playback accordingly. Underneath its notably more mesh-like fabric jacket, the Echo houses a 76mm woofer plus dual 20mm front-firing tweeters, a set-up that supports Dolby Stereo (not to be confused with Dolby Atmos, which remains exclusive to the Echo Studio in the Amazon smart speaker family). It’s a small issue – since Echo speakers need to be plugged in to operate, you’re unlikely to put one in the centre of a room, but we found better multi-directional sound in the older, cylindrical model. Perhaps one small mark against the new design is a rising die-cast aluminium ellipse that is at its highest above the connection ports, meaning that the back portion of the speaker doesn’t provide great omnidirectional sound output. Around the back is where you’ll find the power socket and 3.5mm audio output.

xwave echo review

On the top panel are buttons for Alexa, volume and mic mute.












Xwave echo review