Suddenly, Amazon wants you to buy the one thing you'd never expect
What is going on at Amazon? It's clearly something very strange. Why on earth is the company peddling this of all particular things?
What is going on at Amazon? It's clearly something very strange. Why on earth is the company peddling this of all particular things?
Alexa has grown into a pervasive personal assistant. We were curious about what features the Alexa team loves that many of us haven't noticed. Here we spotlight ten slick features you may have missed that are sure to make you feel more at peace with our robot overlords.
Losing out on the Future Retail deal to Reliance may be even harder to swallow if Amazon is found to be guilty of violating some of India's ecommerce rules.
David Gewirtz takes a hard look at how Amazon's upcoming fleet of custom-designed electric vehicles might create an extended retail distribution chain from the warehouse to the porch, and what that might mean for the billions of boxes littering our curbs.
When you start adding more Echo-enabled devices in an enclosed space, at some point, the devices start arguing among themselves. One way to prevent this is to give each its own, unique name. To do that, we need more wake words.
I've started asking this question but I'm not getting any answers...
The last time Target launched a discount brand from a designer label, both the site and customer service overall crashed. Can Target endure another episode like that?
Amazon has filed a lawsuit against North Carolina's Department of Revenue to prevent the state from getting the names of every resident that bought anything from the retailer since 2003. The ramifications could be huge.
Amazon tops the list of a research study that looks at brand trust.
Don't have a Wii or PS3 yet? Amazon has started a lottery for the chance to buy one on their web site. And for those who got a Wii early, Nintendo wants to replace the strap on your Wiimote so you won't crash it into your new TV.