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  • 5 ways to get Alexa to shut the hell up

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    • 1 comment
    • 352 views
    • 5 minutes

    Is Alexa driving you nuts with unnecessary weather alerts, ultra-detailed delivery updates, and random "by the way" digressions? Help is here.

     

    “By the way,” Alexa sometimes says after responding to a command, followed by a random tidbit or suggestion you never asked for. Sound familiar?

     

    To be fair, Alexa is just trying to be helpful with its “by the way” asides. Still, Amazon’s chatty voice assistant tends to butt in when it’s not wanted, making unnecessary announcements or overstaying its welcome with random digressions.

     

    Luckily, there are plenty of ways to make Alexa pipe down. In some cases, all it takes is tapping a few toggles in the Alexa app. In others, a little hacking is involved.  

     

    Either way, we’ll guide you through the process—and in return, you’ll get a little peace and quiet.


    Turn off weather notifications

     

    It’s always a good idea to keep abreast of dangerous weather conditions, particularly when it comes to heatwaves, flooding, tornadoes, and hurricanes.

     

    But rip tides and wind advisories? That’s a little much—and besides, Alexa’s warnings might already be duplicating those you’re already getting from your phone or another app.

     

    Here’s how to turn Alexa’s weather notifications off, or adjust how they’re delivered:

     

    1. Open the Alexa app, then tap More, Settings, Notifications, then scroll all the way down to Weather.
    2. Tap Severe Weather Alert, then tweak the options. You can choose whether Alexa tells you about severe weather alerts repeatedly or just once, as well as whether you also want mobile push notifications.  
    3. Finally, you can choose a delivery method: either out-loud Alexa announcements, or just standard notifications on your Alexa devices.

     

    Turn off Amazon shopping notifications

     

    If you’re worried about porch pirates, you may well want to know the moment an Amazon delivery lands on your doorstep.  

     

    That said, you might not want to hear every last detail about your incoming Amazon orders, such as when an Amazon package is out for delivery, whether your return made it back to the warehouse, or the status of a given “subscribe and save” item.

     

    If you want to keep a lid of Alexa’s announcements about your Amazon shopping orders, here’s what you do.

     

    1. Open the Alexa app, then tap More, Settings, Notifications, and finally Amazon Shopping.
    2. Check out the various options and disable them as needed. For example, you can keep Alexa from announcing updates on items you’ve ordered or returned, or silence the “out for delivery” and “delivered” notifications.
    3. You can also put the kibosh on updates about your “Subscribe & Save” orders, or cease deal and reorder recommendations.

     

    Turn off “Always follow up” mode for reminders

     

    Alexa can become quite the nag when it comes to reminders, bugging you repeatedly until they’re marked as completed.  

     

    Now, perhaps you do want Alexa to stay on your case about tasks, chores, or anything else you need to be reminded about. But if Alexa’s repeated reminders about your reminders are driving you mad, give this a try.

     

    1. Tap More, Settings, Reminders.
    2. Scroll down and disable the Always follow-up option to keep Alexa from bugging you about reminders that haven’t been marked as completed.
    3. While you’re at it, you can reduce the number of times Alexa announces a reminder (the range is between one and three times).

     

    Turn on Brief Mode

     

    Even during everyday interactions, Alexa can be overly chatty, starting from the moment you say the “Alexa” wake word and though the completion of a given voice command (“Your lights are off now”).

     

    If you just want Alexa to do your bidding with a minimum of fuss, give this setting a shot.

     

    1.     Tap More, Settings, Voice Responses.
    2.     Enable Brief Mode.

     

    Now, Alexa should be much quieter when obeying your commands, acknowledging the completion of most tasks with a simple beep.


    Keep “by the way” at bay

     

    So, if you thought Brief Mode would put a stop to Alexa’s “by the way” asides, think again.

     

    Even with the Brief Mode setting enabled, “by the way” will still manage to crop up every so often, typically after you’ve asked Alexa to perform a task.

     

    The bad news is that there’s no Alexa setting that reliably banishes the “by the way” digressions for good. The good news is that an Alexa hack discovered by Reddit users can help keep “by the way” at bay.

     

    The hack (which, as noted, comes from Reddit, by way of AFTVnews) involves simply telling Alexa to “stop By the Way.” Easy—except Alexa will only stop the “by the ways” temporarily.

     

    A more permanent solution is to create a routine that issues the “stop By the Way” command every day.

     

    1. Tap More, Routines, then tap the “+” button in the top-right corner of the screen.  
    2. Go ahead and name the routine (maybe “Stop by the way”), then add a triggering event, such as a given time each day (Schedule, At Time).
    3. Then, add an action. For this, tap Custom, then type “stop by the way.”

     

    Now Alexa will remind herself each day to stop “by the way,” and—hopefully—your “by the way” days should be over.

     

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    Check... check... all check. That 'by the way' was the last thing I had to stop some time ago. Simply telling it to stop worked so far here and it's probably been four months or more. I'll keep that last trick in mind though.

     

    We have several Echo Dots around the place; they are the only IoT things allowed onto the internet on my isolated IoT VLAN. All the rest of my smart stuff (and I have a lot of remote sockets, home-made modules and sensors, etc) is reprogrammed with Tasmota and put into Hue Bridge or Belkin WeMo mode. That makes them work completely locally but keeps Echo (legacy device) compatibility.

     

    Basically, the Echo reaches out to Amazon for the voice recognition, but then sends device commands itself over the IoT VLAN rather than them coming from some third part server or remote app. No internet access needed for the devices and my MikroTik rules block them completely from that, but allow stateful VLAN routing from the main VLAN so I can initiate communication with them and control them from my control panel on any PC. Just think of all the calories I save by not having to get up from my couch to turn on the garden lights, or the display cabinet, or the heating... I need to go on a diet!

     

    My latest project, a week ago, was to add RF remote control to the system so I can turn on my driveway security lights from the car on the street, for night-time parking on the narrow and walled drive. I could have done it from my phone, but it's easier to just keep a little remote fob in the car and push one button instead of fishing the phone out of my pocket and navigating that. The movement sensor never picks up the car until after I really need it.

     

    The Echos have had some irritating software bugs crop up over the years though, which I've often battled Amazon over for months:

    1. After a software update, the echo would become completely unresponsive to voice until reset, after an alarm was stopped by voice command (only - any other method didn't trigger the bug). Amazon's initial fix for that, after replacing my device (I told them it was software) and me arguing with them repeatedly, was to push a software update that simply reset the device every time the alarm was turned off. Fine, except that I then couldn't ask what time it was, set a snooze, or anything else for a few minutes while it rebooted. Six months after that, it finally worked properly again.

    2. The auto-dimming on the LED clock stopped working for two months, staying full bright. I could read a book by it in the bedroom!

    3. Playing music (with my subscription) - the music would just randomly stop in the middle of a song. Sometimes it would start again minutes later, sometimes not. Amazon said repeatedly it was my internet connection; of course it was not.

    4. My music subscription itself was repeatedly unlinked from the registered echo; seemingly because I had several on my account but only one was subscribed. That got so bad that Amazon gave me a free upgrade to all-device membership. I've cancelled it now because I got sick of the intermittent issues with it.

    5. Complete loss of echo service and failure to reconnect if my internet connection was under heavy use, even once it was freed up again. That seems fixed now, but a year ago I would have to go around and reset all the devices every time I did an hour's torrenting.

    6. Volume setting being very flaky; every time we used the intercom function, it would set the general volume to maximum and we would have to turn it down next time it said something. Conversely, the music volume kept resetting to barely audible.

     

    We still love Alexa. "Alexa, turn the electric blanket on". I really hate to think what Amazon are going to make it fail at when they fully roll out AI Alexa.

    Edited by Mutton
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