Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Smart Home
  4. s

Screen showdown: Amazon Echo Show vs. Google Home with a Chromecast

Add as a preferred source on Google

If you are looking to buy a voice assistant, you will inevitably run into the problem of choosing between a product from Google or Amazon. Both companies have voice assistants and, recently, have begun to include video. Google has Google Home with Chromecast, while Amazon has the Echo Show. The question most consumers have regarding the two is: Can the Google Home with Chromecast keep up with the Echo Show?

Since the Google Home does not come with a screen attached, you will need to buy Chromecast, which is a $35 investment. The Chromecast will attach to a screen, such as a TV, and will allow you to stream video to that TV; the Google Home can cast YouTube videos and Netflix to your TV once Chromecast has been set up. At the moment, however, Google Home cannot turn the TV on. This means you will have to either turn the TV on and then tell Google Home to play a video or leave the TV on all the time.

Recommended Videos

Beyond videos, the Echo Show dominates the added video field.

Both devices can play specific YouTube videos and recipe videos. However, Google Home will pick a random video from YouTube that it thinks best fits what you want, while the Echo Show will show you options for videos. Also, Google Home will only show you a video, not any instructions for recipes or other videos.

Beyond videos, the Echo Show dominates the added video field. The Echo Show can show you lists of movies that are playing in the area, shopping lists, lyrics to songs, news highlights, and calendar events. The Google Home just isn’t able to provide these features with Chromecast.

Another feature that the Echo Show has that the Google Home does not have is Drop In. Drop In allows users with the Alexa app to connect directly with the Echo Show in a FaceTime-esque scenario. This video call connects directly to the screen on the Echo Show, but only users with the Alexa app are able to connect. Google Home can make calls to any other US phone, but there is no video calling that is available, yet.

When comparing these two devices it is clear they are not on the same level. The Echo Show simply does the video features much better than the Google Home. That being said, the Google Home is much better at knowledge questions simply because it has access to Google’s knowledge. Overall, the Echo Show has a much better integrated video system that Chromecast can’t compare to.

David Cogen, a regular contributor here at Digital Trends, runs a popular tech blog TheUnlockr.com that focuses on tech news, tips and tricks, and the latest tech. You can also find him over at Twitter discussing the latest tech trends.

Nicole Edsall
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Google pulls the plug on Project Mariner, the AI agent that browsed the web like a human
The autonomous browser agent Google introduced at I/O 2025 is now more. Its technology is being absorbed into the Gemini API and Gemini Agent.
Diagram, Business Card, Paper

Google has shut down Project Mariner, the autonomous web browsing agent it debuted at I/O last year. The tool, which could navigate Chrome, fill out forms, search listings, and book travel by taking screenshots and visually recognizing page elements, is no longer available. Its landing page now shows a notice with the shutdown date listed as May 4, 2026.

A browser agent that saw what you saw

Read more
Google responds to Chrome’s silent Gemini Nano install, stops short of addressing consent
Chrome's GM says on-device AI is central to the browser's security strategy, but did not explain why deleting it triggers an automatic re-download.
Google Chrome with Gemini

Google Chrome VP and GM Parisa Tabriz has responded to criticism over Chrome's practice of silently downloading a 4GB AI model onto users' devices, saying on-device AI is central to the browser's security and developer strategy.

What triggered the backlash

Read more
Anthropic just taught Claude to dream between tasks, and it makes agents meaningfully smarter
Dreaming turns Claude from an AI that forgets everything the moment a session ends into one that quietly gets better at its job every time it's not actively working.
Claude Dreaming featured image.

Anthropic just gave Claude something that sounds like a perfect science fiction plot: the ability to dream. The company has announced three upgrades to Claude Managed Agents: Dreaming, Outcomes, and Multiagent Orchestration. 

While I agree that the Dreaming clearly has the most evocative name, it’s also the one with the most practical implications for developers building AI agents that can handle complex, long-running work. 

Read more