Amazon’s Avalanche of New Hardware Announcements - DTNS 5115
Added 2025-09-30 18:49:46 +0000 UTCDaniel Ek is out as CEO of Spotify but he isn’t going far, and Eóin Tuohy from Sports Impact Technologies talks about his wearable that quantifies head impacts in field sports.
Starring Jason Howell, Tom Merritt, and Eóin Tuohy.
JASON: This is the Daily Tech News for Tuesday, September 30, 2025. We tell you what you need to know, follow up on the context of those stories and help each other understand.
TOM: Today, Jason goes to Ireland to check out a tiny wearable that helps detect head injuries during impact sports, and Amazon unveils a slew of new hardware.
I’m Jason Howell,
I’m Tom Merritt.
JASON: Let’s start with what you need to know with the big story.
BIG STORY
Amazon Revamps Echo Speakers, Displays in Hardware Reboot
Amazon announces new Fire TVs and Fire TV 4K Select with Alexa+ — now you can jump to your favorite movie scene just by saying it
Amazon announces new Kindle Scribes including one with a color screen
Amazon Launches Color Kindle with Stylus, $40 TV Stick With 4K Video
Amazon Devices News: $630 Color Kindle Scribe, $40 4K Fire TV Stick, Ring, Blink - Bloomberg
Ring launches upgraded cameras with Retinal Vision 4K recording | The Verge
Alexa Plus is available out of the box on new Echo devices | The Verge
JASON: Amazon held a big hardware event in New York City today with a bunch of new hardware taking stage.
First, a few new Echo speakers, including the Echo Dot Max, a $100 speaker powered by its AZ3 chip that Amazon says is "designed to run AI edge models of the future to enable better conversation detection." The Max gets two drivers with three times the bass of the Echo Dot gen 5. The Echo Studio, its first update since 2019, will cost $220 and offers three drivers and a woofer along with spatial audio and Dolby Atmos support. Amazon announced Alexa Home Theater, which allows for connecting up to five Echo speakers together in a home theater environment.
There are also upgraded Echo Shows with displays, the Echo Show 8 and Echo Show 11. They have higher-resolution LCD screens than previous Echo Shows, improved speakers, optional stands, and a more responsive touch screen. And it has an Omnisense system that lets the Echo Show recognize users and automatically display such personal data (including integration with Oura).
JASON: Very interesting to me is the new Fire TV stick, primarily because the OS underpinnings are no longer using Android. The new $40 Fire TV 4K Select stick will run a new Vega OS instead. Amazon claims the new OS will offer improved speed over the previous OS.
Still running the old FireTV OS based on Android though, Amazon also showed off the Fire TV Omni QLED flagship series with a faster processor offering a jump of 40% in performance and a 60% boost in brightness. Its 2-Series and 4-Series displays get updates as well, ranging between 32-inch and 55-inch panels with minimal bezels. The new TVs have a sensor that wakes up the TV when you walk into the room. The Omni starts at $479 while the 2 and 4 series models start at $159, shipping in October.
All the new Echo and Fire TV devices will come with Alexa+ out of the box. That’s the improved voice assistant that is in early preview. It’s included with Prime or available for $20 a month on its own. And if you don’t like the improvements, Amazon will let you downgrade to old Alexa still since it's technically in early access.
TOM: OK, some Kindles and Ring devices and then we’ve covered it all.
Amazon announced new versions of the Kindle Scribe, its ereaders meant for notetaking. There is now an 11-inch version, up from 10.2 inches, which weighs 400 grams rather than 433 grams. It’s also 5.4mm thick, which is thinner than an iPad Air. They have an improved LED lighting system that keeps the bezels smaller, too. And the gap between the glass and the screen is reduced to make it feel like you're writing directly with the tip of the stylus. An improved processor and memory mean page turns should feel 40% faster. Among the software features are the ability to export notes directly to Microsoft OneNote and access documents from OneDrive and Google Drive. There's also improved search and summarization capabilities, including a feature that can recap what you've read in a book so far, with some Kindle books. The three new Kindle Scribe models are more expensive, now starting at $430 for the one without a front light, which is up $30 over the previous entry-level price. The standard Kindle Scribe starts at $500, and the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft (with the color e-ink screen) is $630. They launch in the coming months.
TOM: And finally, the new Ring devices have improved video resolution. The new $179.99 Ring Wired Doorbell and $59.99 Indoor Cam Plus have 2K resolution, and there's 4K in the $249.99 Ring Wired Doorbell Pro 4K, $199.99 Outdoor Cam Pro 4K, $249.99 Spotlight Cam Pro 4K, and the $279.99 Floodlight Cam Pro 4K. There are also Power over Ethernet versions of the Spotlight Cam Pro, Outdoor Cam Pro, and Wired Doorbell Elite. There's facial recognition for improved ability to tell you whether you know the person at the door, and if so, who it is. Alexa Plus is coming to the doorbells so it can answer for you and ask questions, and give instructions. And a new Search Party mode is there for neighbors who all use Ring, to help find lost pets by searching for video evidence that they passed by.
TOM: DTNS is made possible by you the listener. Thanks to
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And Mike Rodgers
JASON: There’s more we need to know today, let’s get to the briefs.
BRIEFS
Spotify Announces Leadership Evolution: Daniel Ek to Become Executive Chairman, Alex Norström and Gustav Söderström to Become Co-CEOs in January 2026
TOM: Spotify announced that Founder and CEO Daniel Ek will shift into the role of Executive Chairman at the start of 2026. In his place, Alex Norström and Gustav Söderström will both lead the company in co-CEO roles after having acted as co-Presidents for the past three years. The Board is confident that Söderström and Norström will receive shareholder approval. Ek told staff in a company memo that he will spend more of his time on "strategy, capital allocation, regulatory efforts, and the calls that will shape the next decade for Spotify."
Beats Upgrades Fit Earbuds With Improved Durability, Smaller Case
JASON: Apple-owned Beats just launched the Powerbeats Fit earbuds, replacing the Beats Fit Pro. The new buds feature an improved fit, better durability, and redesigned wingtips to hold them in place. The case also shrank by 17%. Like the model before, the buds are IPX4 water-resistant and have a similar sound and noise cancellation quality. They use the older H1 chip and can last around seven hours without ANC before needing a charge. The Powerbeats Fit earbuds start shipping in four colors this Thursday for $200.
OpenAI’s New Sora Video Generator to Require Copyright Holders to Opt Out
OpenAI Is Preparing to Launch a Social App for AI-Generated Videos
TOM: OpenAI is getting ready to launch a new Sora 2 video model and, along with it, a TikTok style social app that will reportedly feature only vertical AI-generated clips. Wired reports that the app won't even have access to the camera roll on devices. Clips will be capped at 10 seconds within the app. It will include identity verification so users can let others remix videos using their likeness, with notifications sent for each use. Wired says the app will prohibit the use of some copyrighted content. Separately, the Wall Street Journal reports that the Sora 2 model will offer rightsholders the chance to block their work from appearing in Sora outputs. The new app and the new Sora 2 model could launch by the end of 2025.
Opera launches Neon AI browser to join agentic web browsing race
Opera Announces Neon, a Fully Agentic Web Browser
JASON: Opera has launched Opera Neon, its AI-powered browser with agentic AI hooks. Opera Neon can perform actions across browser tabs, automate tasks and workflows like booking trips or shopping, and research and synthesize information from the web. Opera shared that the browser can also use a "cloud computer" to “help you when you have big, hard tasks to solve, and want to build new things to use later, either by yourself or with others.” Users who want to check it out now can sign up for the waitlist.
DoorDash unveils Dot, its autonomous robot built to deliver your food
TOM: DoorDash introduced Dot a small WALL-E-looking autonomous robot, painted all red and designed for local food and package deliveries. Dot can travel on roads, bike lanes, and sidewalks at up to 20 miles per hour with up to 30 pounds worth of cargo capacity. Imagine storing six pizzas inside the robot's cargo space that opens up like a large mouth. Dot is also small enough to fit through doorways. The robot has eight external cameras, radar, and lidar for obstacle avoidance and navigation. Dot is piloting in Tempe and Mesa, Arizona with plans to make Dot available to all 1.6 million Phoenix region residents by the end of 2025.
JASON: And finally, a few quick headlines that are just good to know if you want to understand the news in the future.
Introducing Claude Sonnet 4.5
JASON: Anthropic launched Claude Sonnet 4.5, a major upgrade that includes new tools like code checkpoints, VS Code integration, context editing, an Agent SDK, and more advanced safety protections.
Adobe Brings Its Powerful Premiere Video-Editing App to the iPhone
TOM: Adobe has launched its Premiere video-editing app on the iPhone for the first time, with major editing tools for free, with paid options that unlock cloud storage and generative AI credits for advanced functions.
F-Droid says Google’s new sideloading restrictions will kill the project
JASON: F-Droid says Google's new developer verification and sideloading restrictions, which include registration requirements and personal information along with payments, will consolidate Google's control over Android software and might kill alternative app stores like the one it offers.
Gavin Newsom signs first-in-nation AI safety law
TOM: California’s Governor signed SB 53, the nation's first AI safety law, requiring major AI companies to publicly disclose safety and security protocols, report major incidents, and protect whistleblowers.
TOM: Those are the essentials for today. Let’s dive a little deeper.
DIVE A LITTLE DEEPER
JASON: I just got back from Dublin, Ireland, where I was sent by Enterprise Ireland, a government organization that invests in and supports Irish startups. They were showcasing several Irish tech startups that are making waves in sports tech and med tech industries, timed with the big NFL game last weekend. I had the chance to talk with a number of founders and check out their unique technologies. Today, we’re starting with my conversation with Eóin Tuohy, founder and CEO of Sports Impact Technologies. His team is focused on head injury health, using a tiny behind-the-ear sensor that tracks head impacts in real time.
PROMO
TOM: Join in the conversation in our Discord, which you can join by linking to a Patreon account at patreon.com/dtns
HELPING EACH OTHER UNDERSTAND
JASON: We end every episode of DTNS with some shared wisdom. Today Eva is helping us understand Spice bags!
TOM: Eva writes:
A spice bag is a fundamental part of Irish food that consists of chunky chips (fries as you would call them) that are deep fried with some shredded onions, peppers, that kind of thing and then mixed with chilli salt, shredded chicken and doused in a spice mix instead of just plain salt and usually served with a curry sauce on the side. It's perfect drunk food and absolutely delicious when done well. If you are ever in Co. Kildare, check out the local Chinese Takeaway in Prosperous. They have a fabulous spice bag, drive a bit more down the road, and you can come visit me.
TOM: What are you thinking about? Got some insight into a story? Share it with us feedback@dailytechnewsshow.com
JASON: Thanks to Eóin Tuohy and Eva for contributing to today’s show. And thank YOU for being along for Daily Tech News Show. You can keep us in business by becoming a patron, atPatreon.com/dtns
Comments
I guess I'll be waiting for the gen 2 or gen 3 edition of the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft... I've got a gen 1 Kindle Scribe and I love it. It's the right size for the PDFs I've acquired from other sources and is great for almost all* of my Kindle library. The only thing that would make it better is color - partly for the graphic novels, and partly because an e-ink screen is better for the wiring diagrams and other bench-side references, and many of those are better with color. It's the price that keeps me from upgrading right away... *For some reason the Shel Silverstein Kindle books force a partial page orientation and other weirdness. I'd love a digital edition of the books I don't currently have on Kindle (digital feels like a great idea after every box of physical books I load while moving)
AnonJr
2025-10-01 15:11:22 +0000 UTCAny Beamish? Ah! Autumn, Happy wall to wall hardware events and Russians getting to Apple 🍏 Products first. Also, it's the first day of The Spoons Autumn 🍂 Real Ale Festival. Autumn is good. Political conference season too. Brain trauma, not good. Interesting and Informative segment, again. The Tumble Inn - Ponty has a Spice Bag ready for Jason.
R W Nash
2025-10-01 05:05:00 +0000 UTC