Skip to main content

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

Amazon plans massive expansions, new partnerships for Alexa and Fire TV in 2020

If you thought that the marriage of voice assistants and TVs were just a flash in the pan and likely to follow the same fate as 3D, think again. Here at CES 2020, Amazon has outlined its growing ambitions for both its Alexa voice assistant and its Alexa-compatible Fire TV streaming platform — and they’re vast. Not only will 2020 be the year that hands-free Alexa comes to major TV brands as a built-in feature, but we’ll also see the Fire TV platform emerge as a true competitor to Roku’s Roku TV OS, for TV makers that want an easy way to embed streaming smarts without building an experience from scratch.

Fire-TV-Edition
Image used with permission by copyright holder

LG has already announced that its latest OLED and NanoCell TVs will include hands-free voice commands. However, it would have been easy to miss a related announcement: These new models will have Amazon Alexa Premium Far-Field Voice compatibility in the future, which means you’ll be able to leave the remote parked on the coffee table (or more likely wedged between the couch cushions) and simply ask Alexa to change the channel or start streaming a show. Samsung and Skyworth will also be announcing new TV models with Alexa built-in.

Fire TV Edition is the name Amazon uses to refer to the version of Fire TV that manufacturers can embed in their products. If you see a TV, soundbar or other device that includes Amazon Fire TV (and Amazon didn’t make it), that device uses Fire TV Edition. The platform has already proven incredibly successful: BestBuy has sold millions of Fire TV Edition TVs by Insignia and Toshiba so far, after announcing the products in 2018. Now, Amazon plans to expand Fire TV Edition to more than 150 device models, in 10 countries, by the end of 2020.

These devices will be the usual suspects, like smart TVs and smart soundbars — Anker released the first Fire TV soundbar in 2019 with its Anker Nebula Soundbar. TCL has also joined the smart soundbar party: Its

Alto 8+ Soundbar–Fire TV Edition

goes on sale today in the U.S. and Canada. Polk Audio is also working on a Fire TV Edition soundbar, according to Amazon. You can expect these Fire TV soundbars to become a lot more capable in 2020 — Amazon is expanding what these devices can do, with support for Dolby Atmos, 3rd-party device control, HDMI switching, and, of course, hands-free Alexa via far-field mics on the way. Some of these new Fire TV Edition soundbars may have capabilities to match Amazon’s own Fire TV Cube.

With Fire TV Edition for Operators, Amazon is going to make it considerably easier for cable and satellite companies to offer a customized streaming experience for customers. Amazon tells us it is working with partners like Tata Sky and Verizon to build customized, co-branded experiences on Fire TV devices like the Fire TV Cube and Fire TV Stick 4K. It could be a big boost for these companies as they seek ways to keep their customers from cutting the cord entirely.

Amazon also wants to make Fire TV mobile: Its Fire TV Edition for Auto brings the streaming platform to in-car entertainment systems. BMW and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles will be the first automakers to embed Fire TV Edition into their vehicles. The platform will take advantage of hands-free Alexa voice commands and can connect to streaming content through in-vehicle Wi-Fi over LTE, or via a smartphone’s built-in hot spot. We’re not entirely sure how BMW and Fiat Chrysler will prevent these new entertainment options from becoming yet another source of distraction for drivers, but then again, as we head toward an increasingly driverless future, that might not be as big of a problem in another five years.

Follow our live blog for more CES news and announcements.

Updated on January 7: An earlier version of this article included an inaccurate description of Fire TV Edition for Operators. The program creates customized versions of Amazon’s own devices, not third-party devices.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
Amazon’s third-gen Fire TV Cube has great features the Apple TV is missing
Fire TV Cube.

As part of its September 2022 devices event, Amazon has announced a new version of its Fire TV Cube streaming device, priced at $140. It's the first streamer we've seen that includes an HDMI input in addition to its HDMI output, letting it display content from devices like cable or satellite set-top boxes or Blu-ray players, while it controls those devices via Alexa or the included remote control. And speaking of remotes, Amazon has upgraded that device as well. The $35 Alexa Voice Remote Pro now includes backlighting and a remote control finder feature -- both of which are absent from the remote that Apple includes with its Apple TV 4K.

Oddly, Amazon decided the new Fire TV Cube will come with the standard Alexa Voice Remote -- not the Pro model -- for its $140 price, but you can add the $35 Voice Remote Pro when you order it.

Read more
Is new Fire TV hardware on the way at Amazon’s fall event?
Amazon Fire TV Cube

We've already taken a look at what we hope to see from Amazon at its fall event — scheduled virtually for September 28. It's Amazon, so undoubtedly there will be a ton of smart home-type stuff at the ready.

But what about Amazon Fire TV? Are there new sticks on the horizon? Maybe a new Fire TV Cube?

Read more
YouTube TV now available in 5.1 surround sound on Amazon Fire TV devices
youtube tv spanish language channels

In 2021, Google's YouTube let it be known that it had finally updated its YouTube TV subscription live TV streaming service with 5.1 surround sound, a move that had been eagerly anticipated by its subscribers since, well, forever. But it only covered select smart TV platforms like LG and Samsung. Then, in early June 2022, the service announced that more devices and platforms were joining the 5.1 party, with the addition of Roku, Android TV, and Google TV. But for some reason, Amazon's Fire TV, the most popular streaming platform in the world, didn't make the 5.1 cut. Until now.

As of June 23, 2022, Amazon says that, "Fire TV Stick 4k Max, Fire TV Stick, and Fire TV Stick Lite all now support YouTube TV's 5.1 surround sound feature." Curiously, Amazon has made no mention of its other Fire TV devices, like its own Fire TV Omni 4K TV, the original Fire TV Stick 4K, or the aging Fire TV Cube. Still, it appears that now pretty much everyone who wants YouTube TV in 5.1 surround sound can get it. Oh, well except for Apple TV owners and those who use game consoles to watch live TV streaming. These folks are still stuck in two-channel stereo, at least for the time being.

Read more