Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Mobile
  3. Computing
  4. Emerging Tech
  5. Wearables
  6. Web
  7. News

Pebble’s clip-on Core will tap into Amazon Alexa for voice assistance smarts

Add as a preferred source on Google

It isn’t news that Pebble, the company behind one of Kickstarter’s most successful crowdfunding campaigns in history, is rolling a few new wearables off the proverbial (and literal) assembly line. But what is news is that one of them, the clip-on Core, is getting voice assistance features courtesy of Amazon. In a blog post on Thursday, Pebble announced that the Core will ship with Amazon’s Alexa technology on board.

Alexa is basically unfettered on the Core, which is to say it can interpret most, if not all, of the commands available on Amazon’s dedicated Echo devices. You can shuffle the songs and albums of your favorite artists from Amazon Prime Music and iHeart Radio; get a daily news briefing from The Washington Post and NPR; buy stuff from Amazon; get weather and traffic updates; control smart home appliances like lights, thermostats, and locks; and set timers and reminders. But in addition, you can perform the many tasks made possible by third-party apps — “Skills,” in Amazon’s vernacular — that crafty developers have so far created. Want delivery from Domino’s? Ask Alexa to order the usual. Need an Uber in the next few minutes? Tell Alexa to summon a nearby driver.

Recommended Videos

How is Alexa integration going to work on the Core, exactly? Pebble CEO Eric Migicovsky didn’t dive into the technical details, but made sure to point out that the Core is the first stand-alone wearable to tap into Alexa’s powerful linguistic capabilities. That’s made possible, he said, by the Core’s connectivity: It packs a 3G SIM slot that provides the data connection Alexa needs to function independent of a paired smartphone.

“Experiencing Amazon Alexa on-the-go right from Pebble Core is game-changing for wearable technology,” Migicovsky said in press release. “We’re longtime fans of the powerful voice services Alexa delivers, and it only gets smarter and more useful over time. It’s an approach we embrace with our own products.”

“The integration of Amazon Alexa into Pebble Core is exciting to see,” said Amazon’s Alexa chief Steve Rabuchin. “By making Alexa Voice Services available for free to device makers and developers, we knew there would be no limit to the innovative uses.”

The $69 Core is set to start shipping in “early 2017,” and features music streaming via Spotify Premium plus GPS tracking, Qi wireless charging, and a dedicated button for launching Pebble apps. It, along with the Pebble 2 and Time 2 smartwatches, is part of a new Pebble Kickstarter effort that’s scheduled to conclude in June. By the looks of it, it’s already a quantifiable success: the Redwood City, California-based company’s raised about $10 million with 27 days to go as of publication time, far and beyond its $1 million goal.

Alexa integration’s a big win for Amazon. At tech blog Recode’s Code Conference in San Francisco, Amazon chief Jeff Bezos revealed the the retail giant’s voice intelligence ambitions extended far beyond its first-party Echo hardware. The company has recruited more than 1,000 software engineers to fine-tune Alexa’s software, Bezos said in an interview with Recode’s Walt Mossberg, and that the company has been fine-tuning artificial intelligence algorithms for four years. “There’s so much more to come. It’s just the tip of the iceberg.”

Amazon’s open development approach to Alexa’s already begun to manifest in interesting ways. Chinese company iMCO’s upcoming CoWatch smartwatch leverages Alexa for voice commands. Roger, Lexi, and other voice assistant apps for iOS and Android devices use Alexa to handle their own sets of voice-driven interactions. And Amazon has encouraged enterprising developers to create their own Alexa hardware with kits like the Raspberry Pi.

Kyle Wiggers
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Snapchat Planets Meaning: Order, Rankings, and How Friend Solar System Works
Snapchat Planets turns your best friends list into a solar system, and yes, your orbit says a lot
Snapchat Planets being shown on the Snapchat app on iPhone.

Snapchat+ includes several exclusive features, but few have generated as much curiosity as Snapchat Planets. Part of the app's Friend Solar System, it transforms your Best Friends list into a planetary ranking, assigning each of your top eight friends a planet based on how often you interact.

From Mercury, which represents your closest friend, to Neptune, which represents your eighth closest, the system offers a quick visual snapshot of your interactions. But what do the different planets actually mean, and how does Snapchat decide who gets which one?

Read more
How to use WhatsApp Web
We'll show you how to use WhatsApp on your desktop or laptop
WhatsApp Web

As one of the most popular messaging services, you’ve already heard of WhatsApp. From its humble beginnings in 2009—two years before Apple introduced iMessage—to its acquisition by Facebook (now Meta) in 2014, WhatsApp has become the dominant messaging platform around the globe.

In recent years, it's grown even more potent with new features like video messages, self-destructing voice messages, the ability to edit sent messages, and more. We even finally got an WhatsApp iPad app in May 2025.

Read more
What is WhatsApp? How to use the app, tips, tricks, and more
From setting it up to mastering hidden features, here is your complete guide to WhatsApp.
WhatsApp app store listing open on iPhone

There's no shortage of messaging apps out there. The past decade has given us more options than we know what to do with, largely because smartphones demanded something better than plain old SMS.

Both the App Store and the Play Store are packed with apps that promise to revolutionize the way we communicate. Most of them didn't make it. The truth is, a messaging app is only as good as the number of people using it, and most apps never cross that threshold.

Read more