Noti.Group RSS Feed
  • Contact Us
Monday, March 16, 2026
Noti Group Logo
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
Noti Group
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT

Amazon’s Alexa app is so bad I’m using Siri again

in Technology
Reading Time: 24 mins read
394 17
A A
0
Amazon’s Alexa app is so bad I’m using Siri again
137
SHARES
6.8k
VIEWS
ShareShareShareShareShare

I’ve used Alexa to manage my shopping list for years. There are plenty of great list apps out there, but the convenience of adding items by voice anywhere in my house, pulling up the list on an Echo Show in the kitchen, and having it on my phone via the Alexa app has worked well for me. Until it didn’t.

Alexa Plus, combined with a redesign of the Alexa app that puts the generative AI-powered assistant front and center, has made the entire process so irritating that I’ve reluctantly switched to Apple’s Reminders app and Siri.

This is not what I wanted. I have Echos all over my house, but only a couple of HomePods, and Siri insists on saying my name every time I add something to the list: “Okay, Jennifer, apples are on your list.”

But at least when I pull up the list on my iPhone, it’s just a goddamn list. It’s not an ad for items I don’t want to buy from Whole Foods, or a way to try to get me to chat with Alexa Plus. Siri is annoying, but at least it stays in its lane.

The Alexa app shopping list has become increasingly more cluttered.

By comparison, the Apple Reminders shopping list is clean and simple.

The list experience in the Alexa app has been changing in small ways for a while now. First, I started seeing more ads for the aforementioned Whole Foods products. Then I had to tap through two screens to add anything. Now, the new Alexa chatbot text box appears at the bottom of my list, prompting me to “Ask Alexa.”

It’s the worst place for it, as the instinct is to put what you want to add to your list in there. In the Reminders app, that’s where there’s a nice big plus sign to add an item. But when I typed “butter” into Alexa Plus, I got a guide to butter.

To actually add something to the list, I have to go to the top of the screen, tap add item, which takes me to a second screen where there’s a page of ads for Whole Foods items, and finally, a tiny text box up top where I can type in what I want.

The whole process takes five taps, and that’s with the shopping list tagged as a Favorite, so it’s accessible from the app’s front page. Well, it used to be. Now I have to swipe past a new Alexa Plus chatbot card to get to Favorites. So, make that six taps in total.

The “Add Item” screen I’ve seen for the last few weeks — with large product images.

The new version of this screen, which showed up today.

Using the Alexa app’s iPhone widget speeds things up a smidge, but it still pushes those Whole Foods images and Alexa Plus at me when all I want to do is put butter on my list. With Apple’s Reminders, it’s mostly one tap from opening the app to adding an item to the list.

I asked Amazon about the new Whole Foods product images page, and a spokesperson, Trang Nguyen, told me it was part of a short-term test.

Today, when I opened the list, I still had to click through to the second screen, but instead of big images of mostly Whole Foods products, it now showed a longer, more varied list of suggested products with smaller thumbnails.

Nguyen also said the app should remember the card I was on when I last used it and open to Favorites by default — as it used to do. But none of this changes the fact that the experience has become far too fiddly, especially compared to adding an item to Reminders.

Alexa Plus gave me a guide to butter when I was trying to add butter to the list in the app.

A transcript of my conversation with Alexa when I added sour cream using a voice command to an Echo Show.

Of course, the easiest way to add something is by voice (no ads there), but here Alexa Plus still gets in my way. Asking the new, smarter assistant to add something now frequently involves an entire diatribe — almost like it’s trying to show me how much smarter it is:

Me: “Alexa, add sour cream to my shopping list.”

Alexa Plus: “Looks like you’re already stocked up on that creamy goodness! Sour cream is already chilling in your cart.”

Maybe I’m just turning into a curmudgeon who’s stuck in her ways, but the extra commentary really bugs me.

I’ve repeatedly asked Alexa not to be so verbose, but it hasn’t listened, and the sour cream monologue was the last straw. While Siri and I have an uneasy relationship — no, I don’t want to ask again from my iPhone to see some web results — at least my shopping list is now clean, uncluttered, and ad-free.

The app’s new look is all about Alexa Plus

1/4

The Alexa app’s front page now puts Favorites and Devices cards behind a new Alexa Plus card.

The app’s redesign is part of Amazon’s push to make its generative AI-powered assistant a more generalist assistant, in the vein of ChatGPT and Gemini, rather than just an in-home helper.

When Alexa Plus launched last February, Amazon also said it would launch a new Alexa app. While this redesign is not that (at least I hope not, as a ground-up rebuild of the app is sorely needed), it does bring Alexa Plus to the forefront.

This week, the company announced that Alexa Plus has moved out of its Early Access stage and is now available to everyone in the US for free via the app and on the new Alexa.com website (where you can also access your shopping list). Prime customers and those who pay $20 a month can also access it on their Echo devices.

The redesign is part of Amazon’s push to make Alexa Plus a more generalist AI assistant

Amazon wants you to be able to easily chat with Alexa wherever you are, and the app’s new look is an example of this. The chatbot is front and center when you launch the app — the home page is now an Alexa Plus card pre-filled with prompts based on what it thinks you might need. Then the smaller chatbot interface follows you across every single page of the app.

When Amazon announced the Alexa Plus updates earlier this week, I asked Daniel Rausch, vice president of Alexa and Echo, about the reason for the app changes. “It’s to bring Alexa to the front, have direct access to Alexa more simply in voice and in typed chat,” he said, adding that it’s capable of doing most everything you might want to do in the app.

“You can just directly tell Alexa what you want to accomplish, say changing a Setting, and she’ll either change it herself or tell you exactly where to find it,” said Rausch. But it can’t, apparently, add butter to my shopping list when I type “butter” into the chatbot on the shopping list page.

It’s unclear whether Alexa Plus can be a viable contender against the current players dominating this space. But as Amazon tries to make Alexa Plus happen, it feels like some of what’s actually useful about Alexa is becoming collateral damage. If it can’t handle something as simple as adding butter to my list without turning it into a soliloquy — or an ad — something has gone wrong.

Screenshots by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / noti.group

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Jennifer Pattison Tuohy

    Jennifer Pattison Tuohy

    Jennifer Pattison Tuohy

    Senior Reviewer, Smart Home

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy

  • Amazon

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Amazon

  • Amazon Alexa

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Amazon Alexa

  • News

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All News

  • Smart Home

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Smart Home

  • Tech

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tech

[Notigroup Newsroom in collaboration with other media outlets, with information from the following sources]

Tags: AmazonAmazon AlexaNewsSmart HomeTech
Previous Post

Druski mispronounces Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s name at NFL Honors

Next Post

The gruesome basketball scene that shows Jose Alvarado is built for Knicks

Related Posts

Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation
Technology

Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation

March 16, 2026
The classic Apple Macintosh mouse inspired Spigen’s retro AirPods case
Technology

The classic Apple Macintosh mouse inspired Spigen’s retro AirPods case

March 16, 2026
OpenAI’s adult mode will reportedly be smutty, not pornographic
Technology

OpenAI’s adult mode will reportedly be smutty, not pornographic

March 16, 2026
Aether OS is computer in a browser built for the AT Protocol
Technology

Aether OS is computer in a browser built for the AT Protocol

March 15, 2026
Load More
Next Post
The gruesome basketball scene that shows Jose Alvarado is built for Knicks

The gruesome basketball scene that shows Jose Alvarado is built for Knicks

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • 2026 March Madness bracket West Region breakdown, prediction
  • St. John’s, local hopefuls could capture your March Madness heart
  • Juan Soto fumes with short comment over controversial WBC ending
  • Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation
  • 2026 March Madness bracket East Region breakdown, prediction

Recent Comments

  • Stefano on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Van Hens on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Ioannis K on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Panagiotis Nikolaos on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • John Miele on UK government suggests deleting files to save water

Noti Group All rights reserved

No Result
View All Result
Noti Group

What’s New Here

  • 2026 March Madness bracket West Region breakdown, prediction
  • St. John’s, local hopefuls could capture your March Madness heart
  • Juan Soto fumes with short comment over controversial WBC ending

Topics to Cover!

  • Business (4,749)
  • Entertainment (1,862)
  • General News (326)
  • Health (327)
  • Investigative Journalism (11)
  • Lifestyle (4)
  • Sports (8,139)
  • Technology (6,071)
  • World News (1,336)
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • RSS
  • Contact News Room
  • Code of Conduct
  • Careers
  • Values
  • Advertise
  • DMCA

© 2025 - noti.group - All rights reserved - noti.group runs on 100% green energy.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment

© 2025 - noti.group - All rights reserved - noti.group runs on 100% green energy.