We have three Echo Show 5 units. One in the computer room, one in the family room, and one in my bedroom. I bought them mostly to receive notifications and monitor activity on our Blink cameras.
The Echo in my bedroom has been acting strangely. A couple of weeks ago I set an alarm, and it didn't go off. I didn't think much of it until I stopped receiving camera notifications on just that unit. Turns out the unit in my bedroom was in 'do not disturb' mode, which can only be changed from within the Alexa app, which I never use. I changed that setting back a couple of days ago.
Last night at 2 am when I was in a dead sleep, Alexa suddenly said "Who would you like me to send it to?" I told her to quit, and a minute later she said it again. "Who would you like me to send it to?" She has also randomly started playing music a couple of times.
Here is my question. I know how sometimes two people's garage door openers can be on the same frequency and weird things happen if they are in close proximity. Is it possible that my Echo is on the same frequency as a neighbor's and is receiving commands from them?
The Echo in my bedroom has been acting strangely. A couple of weeks ago I set an alarm, and it didn't go off. I didn't think much of it until I stopped receiving camera notifications on just that unit. Turns out the unit in my bedroom was in 'do not disturb' mode, which can only be changed from within the Alexa app, which I never use. I changed that setting back a couple of days ago.
Last night at 2 am when I was in a dead sleep, Alexa suddenly said "Who would you like me to send it to?" I told her to quit, and a minute later she said it again. "Who would you like me to send it to?" She has also randomly started playing music a couple of times.
Here is my question. I know how sometimes two people's garage door openers can be on the same frequency and weird things happen if they are in close proximity. Is it possible that my Echo is on the same frequency as a neighbor's and is receiving commands from them?