The Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) Echo Show is the best smart home assistant I've ever tested.
It's worth your money to buy it instead of the much more affordable Echo or Echo Dot, since its screen enables a whole new array of uses.
The Echo Show costs $229 for one, with a $100 discount for two. By comparison, the Echo Dot is often priced as low as $35.
I've been testing them for a couple of days, and as I sit here typing my review, I'm already tempted to buy a second one. This is coming from someone who already owns four of the smaller Echo Dots, the larger Amazon Echo and two Google (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Home units.
Here's why the Amazon Echo is so appealing.
The touchscreen enables new functions
The Echo Show is the first Echo to sport a display, which means the information that Alexa, Amazon's smart voice assistant, gives you is also displayed right on the screen. When I asked for the weather, I could scroll through the forecast with a swipe.
And I was able to actually see the steps of a recipe I called up using Alexa. I wasn't tempted to watch movies or TV shows on Alexa, but you can use the screen to catch up on content offered in Amazon's video library, too, like "Man in the High Castle." I also liked that the Echo Show provided the lyrics to songs I asked it to play, which is just a fun touch.
The speaker is pretty good, but not great
I'm not an audiophile but I can tell the difference between cruddy speakers and good ones. The Amazon Echo Show gets nice and loud, but it's nowhere near as good as the Sonos Play:1 I have sitting in my living room.
It sounds better than the Google Home and the original Amazon Echo, though, and it's probably better than any number of budget Bluetooth speakers you might otherwise stream your tunes to. It's good enough for sitting in a bedroom or living room, which is all I need. Know this, though: There's no 3.5mm headphone jack, so you can't hook it up to better speakers (or attach headphones if you want to.)
Video calling is pretty neat, but I'll never use it
You can use the Amazon Echo Show to call other Echo Show units for video chats. I tested this with a second Echo Show with a colleague and it worked pretty well, it's kind of like a FaceTime or Skype chat, and clarity seemed pretty good. Amazon has this creepy "drop in" feature that lets you add contacts who are then allowed to pop up on your screen without any warning.
Amazon says this is for checking in on babies or the elderly, but it seems pretty darn weird to me. I wouldn't blame you for putting tape over the camera of your Echo Show — it seems to be this would be a perfect target for hackers.