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Alexa+ can now order your chow from Grubhub and Uber Eats with a human twist

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Ordering food is rarely a straight line. You start craving pasta, get distracted by burgers, suddenly remember you wanted something light, and somehow still end up ordering the same thing you usually do. It’s chaotic, and it’s very human. Now imagine doing all of that without aggressively tapping your screen.

Alexa finally learns how to take an order like a real person

That’s essentially what Alexa+ is trying to pull off. With its latest update, you can now order food from Grubhub and Uber Eats in a way that you’re talking to it. For years, voice assistants have been stuck in this rigid “you ask, I answer” loop. Now, Alexa+ is trying to fix that by turning food ordering into an actual conversation.

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This is where things get even more interesting — Alexa+ lets you build your order like you would in real life. Want to add a burger with extra ketchup but no onions? Say it. Changed your mind and now want pizza instead? Say that too. Need to bump up quantities? Alexa won’t judge, either. Everything updates in real time on the screen, and Alexa only jumps in when needed. One of the more underrated bits here is how discovery blends into ordering. You’re not just picking from a list, you’re exploring like you’d on a menu.

You can ask things like:

  • Show me desserts.”
  • What’s popular here?
  • Anything kid-friendly?

As you build your order, you’ll see everything neatly laid out: items, quantities, prices, and the total. Once you place the order, Alexa keeps you updated, too. You can casually ask, “Where’s my food?” and get a status update without digging through notifications.

The beginning of a less robotic Alexa

Right now, this new experience is rolling out to Alexa+ users on devices like the Echo Show 8 and above. It’s still early days. Amazon is trying to make Alexa like an assistant you can really interact with, without having to think about how to phrase every command perfectly. And if that means I can order food, change my mind three times, ask for dessert suggestions, and still not feel judged, I’m all in.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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