You need the premium subscription for Amazon, YouTube etc to listen to your playlist. Its very handy and easy to operate. Its compact and follows instructions easily.
Gain control of your life, and your home, with Google Home Hub! This is a sharp-looking and quick-thinking device, and very reasonably priced in comparison to similar controllers.
Voice Match is the perfect way to stay on top of those everyday tasks, allowing you to reference things like calendars, reminders and so much more on the home screen. You can watch the news, make a shopping list, and place Duo voice calls to friends and family who have the Google Duo app installed.
Smart lights, cameras, TVs, appliances, and much more, can be voice-controlled from a single dashboard.
The Google Home Hub sure knows its stuff. Just ask it! Your questions are answered with visual and immersive responses. Queries about anything from recipes, weather, local business information are answered in a flash, and you can even access how-to videos from YouTube with a spoken command.
The Google Home Hub will play any form of music you're in the mood for. Once again, just use your voice to play your favourite songs, albums, artists, and music videos from YouTube Music. Spotify and leading radio stations can also be listened to.
Google Photos integration is a major selling point in this Home Hub. Use your voice to show any picture that you’ve ever taken in Google Photos, and it will respond. For example, just say: "Hey Google, show me my photos from Hawaii" and aloha...there they are!
Manufacturer: Google
You need the premium subscription for Amazon, YouTube etc to listen to your playlist. Its very handy and easy to operate. Its compact and follows instructions easily.
I gave the Google Home as a gift...what a mistake, not once has this thing worked as advertised and the "Fixes" provided by Google didn't help at all. The unit now sits on the closet shelf since it won't respond to verbal commands and frequently will begin talking all by itself..
Buying this product I knew you had a power cable that needed to be connected however I didn't know that you needed to connect it to your network via Ethernet cable. If you are purchasing this as you can not grab a connection in one part of your house then you need to buy at least 2 pods (3 if you...
Doesn't understand most questions
Google has arrived late to the voice-controlled assistant party, and has some catching up to do You probably shouldn't buy Google Home as your primary music system, but fortunately there's much more to it than that.
Simple to use; Unobtrusive design; Works with Chromecast; Multi-room capability; Stereo pairing
Few apps; Average sound; Limited smart home capability; No Bluetooth (but it's coming
The Google Home is fun, functional, and should only get better with time.
It can be personalized to you; giving you info on your commute; weather; and calendar; Works with Chromecast; Answers questions and follow-ups fairly well; Lots of choices for music
Works with fewer devices than Amazon Alexa
Alexa is still the queen of voice assistants. Google Home is learning fast, and it does some things better than Alexa does. If you have a Google Play Music account and multiple Google accounts around your household, Google Home will give you a smoother multi-user experience.
Attractive design; Removable color bases; Well-rounded sound; Multi-room audio
Still fewer skills than Amazon's Alexa; Doesn't work as a standard Bluetooth speaker
For all intents and purposes, Google Home is pretty much a year old and needs to do more. In the U.S., the smart voice box has already been on the market long enough to give app developers time to implement the actions, but so far, the added value is limited to few areas.
Good music control; Accurate voice recognition; Integrates smart home devices from many different manufacturers
Does not use any Phillips Hue scenes; Too few compatible apps
Both wildly intelligent and supremely versatile in the ways in which it can be used, Google Home is evolving quickly compared to the Amazon Echo but it still has to make a few changes to catch up – starting, perhaps, with better integration with Google's own services.
Customizable base; Massive song library; Expanding hardware ecosystem; Six-month YouTube Red trial in US
Missing Google's own services; Phrasing needs to be precise; Google Cast support needs work
We've seen a few Google Assistant smart displays, but until now they've been third-party devices like the JBL Link View and the Lenovo Smart Display. Google only recently decided to create its own first-party answer to the Alexa-powered Amazon Echo Show and Echo Spot, in the form of the $149 Nest Hub. The Nest Hub looks similar to the $230 Echo Show, but is much closer in price, size, and sound quality to the $130 Echo Spot. It's a solid option if you want a simple Google Assistant alarm clock and photo frame near your bed, but JBL and Lenovo's devices are much better suited to being desk and counter companions thanks to their larger screens and better audio quality. A Small, Simple Design The Nest Hub looks like a scaled-down version of the Echo Show. It's a 4.8-by-7.1-by-2.7-inch (HWD) device with a 7-inch, 1,024-by-600 touch screen facing forward, tilted slightly back like an easel and bordered by a 0.5-inch glossy white frame. The screen is mounted on a stretched-oval stand c...
The small, affordable Google Assistant-powered Nest Hub smart display is functional and convenient, but won't impress anyone with its sound quality.
Relatively inexpensive; Small footprint; Useful touch screen
Weak audio; No camera for video calls
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