PCWorld

How to control your TV with Alexa

When it works, controlling your TV with Amazon’s Alexa digital assistant can feel like magic. Using voice commands keeps you from having to thumb through menus and lets you get to what you want to watch much faster.

But using Alexa as your TV remote requires a bit of know-how. Alexa won’t understand everything you might want to do, and controlling your actual television and sound system requires specific equipment.

To avoid potential frustration, we’ll go through what you can and can’t do with Alexa on the Fire TV and other television devices, and explain how to set it all up.

FIRE TV AND ALEXA SETUP

With the exception of the first-generation Fire TV Stick, all Fire TV devices include an Alexa remote, which lets you issue voice commands by holding the microphone button at the top. But for hands-free voice commands, or something with Alexa onboard, such as the Sonos Beam soundbar) or a , which has built-in microphones for picking up voice commands.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PCWorld

PCWorld2 min read
PCWorld
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Matt Egan EDITOR IN CHIEF, CONSUMER BRANDS Jon Phillips DESIGN DIRECTOR Robert Schultz EXECUTIVE EDITORS Brad Chacos, Gordon Mah Ung SENIOR EDITOR Mark Hachman, Alaina Yee ASSOCIATE EDITOR Ashley Biancuzzo EDITOR, PCWORLD, AUSTRALI
PCWorld1 min read
41 Years Later, Windows Notepad Finally Gets Spell Check
Though it’s intentionally simple and there are some excellent alternatives, Microsoft’s humble Notepad text editor has gained a massive following through sheer ubiquity. Today it finally gets a feature that even the best writers (and also I) can’t li
PCWorld3 min read
Lexar SL500 USB SSD: 20Gbps Storage Cut Thin To Win
Physically, Lexar’s SL500 portable USB 3.2×2 SSD makes its SL600 and SL660 stablemates look like chunky monkeys. Actually, measuring a mere 0.3-inches thick (less than 0.2 at the edges), by 2.1-inches wide, by 3.3-inches long, the SL500 make nearly a

Related Books & Audiobooks