Audiobooks discussion
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Listening Using Echo Devices

I had this happen with reading a Kindle book (Wobble to Death). Not only would it not read it but after trying, it couldn't read any Kindle or Audible books until I unplugged it and plugged it in again.
Have you tried starting the book using the Audible app on your phone or computer first, then switching to Alexa? Perhaps the problem is just at the beginning of the book...

• "Alexa, read A Tale of Two Cities from Audible."
Through September 30th, stream this historic novel to get ahead on your back to school reading list."
Thanks for posting! I have read this book (and also listened to an audiobook edition) but it is one of my favorite Dickens.

Second, here's a helpful--sometimes--question:
"Alexa, what's free on Audible?"
Right now, the answer I get is "This month Audible's original production of Treasure Island narrated by a full cast is available to stream." Just say "Alexa, read Treasure Island."
Third, once upon a time you could ask, "Alexa, what are popular audiobooks from Audible this week?" Now, the response is, "Hmm, maybe the skill Hoopla Digital will help."



I do get your point. I've chosen not to add some smart appliances/switches to my home in certain places for fear of an internet provider glitch causing me to be unable to do certain things. It isn't always a good idea to have your home be smarter than you are! ;P
But using an Echo device for hands-free listening that starts and stops by voice command... fun and convenient. I'm over 60 and willing to embrace the technology... after all, I grew up on Star Trek with a computer device that they talked to and she talked back. Ah, if only Alexa sounded like Majel Barrett! And when I started listening to the In Death series by J.D. Robb, I kept thinking how cool it was that they walked into a room and just said, "Lights on!" and they turned on! Now I can do the very same thing--at least in a few rooms. Now if I could only find a Roark, too...
My first Echo was a gift and I treated it at first like a novelty toy. I'd ask the time, weather, to play some music, spell a word, give a definition... and then my audiobooks. It's amazing how quickly I got used to "Alexa resume" and "Alexa stop" to control my listening. And then I figured itt would be nice to have an Echo in my bedroom so if I woke in the night I could easily discover the time... and go to sleep with an audiobook set to stop using a sleep timer... and set an alarm to wake me... and give me my Miriam Webster's Word of the Day while I snuggled under the covers waiting to see if I'd go back to sleep... and tell me my reminders for the day... or add to my grocery list... all without even getting out of bed!
Accepting this technology is often a gradual thing... first a toy, then an essential tool for daily life. I didn't know how much I'd do with Alexa until I got one and week by week added a new thing to use the technology for. The more positive experiences you have with the technology, the more you are willing to try. We boldly go where no one has gone before! Or, maybe we follow in the footsteps of those who blazed the trail... either way, "Alexa, read my latest audiobook."

The key, really, is to have the Alexa/Smart Home options in ADDITION to physical options.
So, for instance, say you're popping popcorn and doing something at the sink/stove/refrigerator while waiting for the pops to stop. You can then stop the microwave when it sounds like it's finished instead of having to stop whatever you're doing and run across the room to stop it before it starts burning.
But I wouldn't trade voice control functionality for physical buttons. It's a supplemental option, not a replacement.
Ideally, though, you can configure things so they just work automatically without saying a thing. So, for instance, if I wake up early, I can verbally turn on the coffee pot and lay there in bed for a few minutes while I wait for it to brew. However, if I wake up at my regular time, the pot will turn on automatically as soon as I get out of bed. It also (along with several lights) turns OFF automatically when I leave for work so I never have to rush around double checking that things are off when I"m already running late.
The door on my detached garage unlocks automatically when my back door is opened and re-locks itself whenever I leave, or after 5 minutes. Etc.
The best sort of home automation is the stuff you never have to turn on/off yourself - it'll just be on/off when you want it to be without you doing anything.
(Note: I'm a big fan of smart home devices and I STILL think a voice controlled microwave is a bit silly. There's a couple of use-cases for it. And I'm sure it'd be easier to operate than touch-button ones for someone who's visually impaired. But for the average user, it's silly.)

I signed up for the invitation to buy one which will allow me to purchase it at half price--current retail price is just under $50 or about the same as an Echo Dot. My sister may be the test subject and get one for Christmas... no more getting into the car and shouting for the audiobook to play, only to remember the Echo is inside the house and not in the car! ;)


• "Alexa, read Funny Amazon Reviews from Audible."
I listened and it was entertaining, though absurd. I assume they are telling the truth about these reviews actually being on Amazon... there are some truly creative and deeply disturbed reviewers out there if so.

• "Alexa, read Pride and Prejudice from Audible."
I have no idea which narrator does this one... I have multiple versions of this book in my own Library and when I ask Alexa to read the book I get one I already own... starting where I last left off.

Later .. I Googled it and got this message on the Audible site: "Cloud player issue
We're currently experiencing a playback issue with the Cloud Player. We are working on it and will have it resolved as soon as possible. "
So that's probably the problem.


"Alexa, play Harry Potter quiz."
Test your knowledge with the official Harry Potter quiz on Alexa. Come back each day to win house points.
The best thing about this quiz is they use clips from the audiobooks narrated by Jim Dale for the questions!
BTW: I chose to be a Ravenclaw and to answer the O.W.L. level questions... should have gone for the N.E.W.T.s though because I got all three right plus the bonus question without breaking a sweat. ;) Now I just have to remember to go back each day for more!


The response was very interesting and gives me hope:
"I can't change the playback speed just yet, please try again later."
I'll keep trying and post any positive results as soon as I get them! *crosses fingers in anticipation*

"Current rate is 125%" and the speed increased with good sound quality!
I tried again and the instruction was "You can say read faster, read slower, or read at normal speed."
Hurray, hurray! thank you Amazon/Audible!

"Current rate is 125%" and the speed increased with good sound quality!
I tried again and the instruction was "You can say read fas..."
Woohoo, no more bluetoothing my phone to get a faster rate.

You can slow the rate down to 75% at its slowest.
The fastest speed is 150% (on the three books I've tried).
If you switch from one book to another, each book reads at the rate last listened to on that particular book. I had one book at 125% and another at 150% and when I switched back and forth they each continued at their selected speed.
The surest way to get what you want is the command, "Alexa, read slower/faster/at normal speed." Any variation tends to get a bit of confusion on Alexa's part. ;)
I'll admit I could wish for more variations in speed at the faster settings, but I'm super excited to have this option at last!

Yes, it took quite a few tries of wording to get the desired speed.
That's the thing about Alexa commercials, they always make it look so smooth and easy when in reality it sometimes takes me 3 or 4 tries to get a light turned on or off.




:D I really liked Pillars of the Earth, but it really can be nice to move through certain scenes a little faster if you want. I also really like that the vocal quality remains good at the 125% rate so that it's barely noticeable that it's going faster. The 150% rate is still good quality as well, but it is noticeable to me that it's faster... at least until my ear acclimates and I wish I had a few faster options! ;)

I haven't used it for Audible books yet since I usually use my bluetooth speaker instead and the Audible app.


LOL It's true there are plenty of benefits to listening to audiobooks, but that's one I hadn't suspected. ;)
I haven't noticed this problem yet myself. I wonder if very long books are more prone to this kind of glitch?

I should have payed closer attention to this... I've begun getting erroneous reports on the time left in my books as well. :( I'm not sure what the issue is as the time given for time remaining is correct when starting a book or when it's been paused for a day or more, but asking while listening some hours in is iffy. I did notice a time-keeping problem when listening via the Cloud Player on Audible, so maybe those problems are linked?


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I'm wondering if this is related to the recent problem with Alexa reporting an inaccurate amount of time left in the book?
Hey, Audible, we're big echo users here, but these problems could reduce our use of Alexa for audiobook reading... help us out here!


Me, too. It's quite addictive, using voice to control audiobook reading... I forget and try to use voice commands in the car, at my sister's house, and once even nearly tried to give a voice command in the grocery store--caught myself in time, thank heavens!
This is why little glitches can be so disconcerting... whatever you do, don't mess with my Echo!
Oh, and while we're at it, someone at Amazon should make Alexa more discriminating about her name. I was listening to an audiobook with a character named Alexis and Alexa kept trying to respond. She kept telling me she couldn't find book titles that were actually the text following the character's name. She did give me the correct spelling of several words from the text though. ;)

So is this a problem with the book itself or just my version?

Here's how to change Alexa's name on your Echo.
* Open the Alexa app on your phone.
* Tap the home page button on the bottom-left. It looks like three rectangles stacked together.
* Select the menu button on the top-left of the page.
* Choose settings.
* Pick "Device Settings."
* Choose the Echo that you want to modify.
* Tap "Wake Word."
* Now you'll be able to change the name Alexa to either "Amazon," "Echo," or "Computer."
Once you've picked one of the wake words, it will respond to that instead of "Alexa," so make sure you remember which one you pick.

The problem is that all alternative wake words also appear in books, on the internet, and in my everyday conversations. And with a computer that speaks, every visit to Amazon.Com would trigger the device! ;)
What I really need is the ability to create my own wake word... some rare name or nonsense syllable that doesn't occur anywhere else.
I noticed in the In Death series, which is set about forty years in our future, that the characters often refer to the machine as the "comp", but when addressing it to locate someone in the building or do an information search they first say, "Computer...". I wonder if J.D. Robb thought about the potential confusion and solved the problem that way or just did it accidentally. At least in the future they don't have to say a name first when turning on the lights!
And I noticed Amazon and Audible are finally touting Alexa's variable playback speeds. Apparently, "Alexa, speed up" is another viable way to increase the rate. If only we could get more than 1.5X out of dear Alexa!



I know what a pain in the backside dealing with customer service can be, but I think you should really consider contacting Amazon about this.
I use my Echo all the time for reading and would hate to lose any of its functionality. I mentioned earlier that I've had similar problems when switching back and forth between devices, but the problem doesn't show up if I don't switch immediately from one to the other and back--den to kitchen to den, for example. Still, I think it's more that I'm being trained by my Echo than it functioning all the time as I want... I stopped even asking how much time is left in a book!
I think it's important for all of us to insist that the reading functions of the Echo work, or we'll eventually have devices that are good for telling us the time and little else.
Books mentioned in this topic
Wobble to Death (other topics)Madness Rules the Hour: Charleston, 1860, and the Mania for War (other topics)
https://www.audible.com/pd/Madness-Ru...
all I get is silence with an occasional loud burst of static. Every other book plays fine, just not that one particular book.
Has this happened to anyone else?