Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Amazon’s Alexa+ just moved into your Bose speaker, if you’re willing to pay the rent

This is a signal that the AI assistant race is expanding well beyond the devices Amazon builds itself.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Alexa+ arrival on Bose speakers.
Amazon

Amazon has officially expanded its AI assistant, Alexa+, beyond the company’s own hardware. Along with the announcement of its Lifestyle Ultra speakers, Bost has also announced that Alexa+ is coming to its lineup of speakers and soundbars across the United States.

This is a first for any non-Amazon audio brand. What’s even more interesting for me is that the rollout covers both new and existing Bose devices. 

What can Alexa+ actually do on a Bose speaker?

Quite a lot, actually. It can do everything it has been doing on Amazon’s first-party lineup of smart speakers. That includes understanding natural language conversations, which unlocks multiple use cases. 

Recommended Videos

For instance, Alexa+ on Bose speakers can create playlists by mood, hunt half-remembered songs based on the only memory you have about them, manage other smart home speakers or devices, make dinner reservations, learn about recipes, and even reorder household staples from Amazon. 

Alexa+ can do all of that based on voice commands, without you having to fiddle around on your smartphone. Now, here’s the slightly disappointing part. Amazon’s Alexa+ is free for all Prime members. Otherwise, it costs $19.99 per month. 

Which Bose devices are getting the upgrade?

Apart from the newly-launched Lifestyle Ultra speakers, Alexa+ is available across a wide range of Bose products that are already in the market. However, you’d have to enable it via Amazon’s Alexa page.

These include the Bose Smart Soundbar (models 300, 600, 900), Portable Smart Speaker, Home Speaker (models 300, 350, 500), Soundbar (models 500, 550, 700), and Music Amplifier. While the Lifestyle lineup will have access to the AI assistant starting May 15, Alexa+ is already live on all the other compatible speakers. 

To me, it looks like Amazon is choosing platform-over-hardware to increase its footprint, rather than keeping the AI assistant locked in Echo devices. This would surely help the company compete with Google’s Gemini and Apple’s Siri over a broader device ecosystem. 

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Bose turns up the volume on home audio with its sleekest and smartest Lifestyle Collection
Bose's newest home audio lineup arrives with bold promises: cinematic sound without the clutter, a decade-overdue soundbar redesign, and a speaker small enough for your bookshelf.
Bost Lifestyle Ultra ecosystem featured image.

Bose has pulled back the curtain on the Lifestyle Collection. It consists of three new premium audio products, built to work individually or as a unified system: Lifestyle Ultra Speaker ($299), Lifestyle Ultra Subwoofer ($899), and Lifestyle Ultra Soundbar ($1,099).  

All the products promise high-fidelity sound wrapped in materials that are aesthetic enough to double as home decor. Pre-orders for the products are already open at Bose’s official website, and availability begins May 15. 

Read more
Sony’s upcoming WH-1000XX headphones spotted in the wild ahead of its official launch
WH-1000XX ColleXion leaks ahead of May 19 reveal with an expensive price tag
sony-WH-1000XX-The ColleXion-headphones-leak

Sony hasn't said a word yet, but the internet already has pictures of it's upcoming headphones. Actor Damson Idris was spotted wearing an unreleased pair of Sony over-ear headphones in New York City ahead of the Met Gala, giving the world its first real look at what's reportedly called the WH-1000XX or ‘The ColleXion’.

https://twitter.com/21metgala/status/2050977668712067256?

Read more
Samsung reveals sharp stretchable display that’s ready for your car’s dashboard
The 3D-style dashboard prototype expands and changes with driving conditions, hinting at more adaptive displays in future cars
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Samsung Display has shown a sharper stretchable display that could make future car dashboards more flexible while keeping key driving information clear.

The company is showing Stretchable Display 2.0 at SID Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, where the demo takes the form of an automotive instrument cluster. The big change is sharpness. The micro LED-based panel reaches 200 PPI, up from the 120 PPI version Samsung Display showed last year, which puts it around the level of current automotive screens.

Read more