Amazon Echo Versus Apple HomePod: Setup, Sound, and the Stuff That Actually Matters
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About this listen
This week on Blind Level Tech, Evan Starnes and Jonathan Price kick things off with some classic dark-humor banter, then jump into listener feedback from Anne in Topeka, Kansas—highlighting the very real (and very frustrating) accessibility pitfalls of modern appliances: “tactile” markings that turn out to be painted-on decoration, hidden features like child lock, and ovens that refuse to heat after a power glitch unless the clock is reset.
From there, the episode pivots into a practical, BLT-style comparison: Amazon Echo / Alexa (including Alexa+) vs Apple HomePod / Siri, with accessibility and real-world usability front and center. Evan breaks down what’s improved with Alexa+ (better conversational flow, expanded integrations, more assistant-like behaviors), what still feels messy (skills being left behind, app UI changes, and feature removals like announcements in your own voice, and why turning on start/end request sounds can be a game-changer for blind users. On the Apple side, the conversation covers HomePod setup simplicity, VoiceOver support on-device, strong audio quality, and how Apple’s ecosystem can be both a strength and a limitation—especially depending on your smart-home brands.
The episode wraps with a lightning-round verdict (cost vs setup vs audio quality vs usability), a call for listener stories and “tech faceplants,” and a clear reminder that Aftersight’s work is powered by community support—whether through donations, merch, or sharing the show.