Member-only story

Why I’ll Opt Out of Amazon’s Bandwidth Collective

Amazon Sidewalk drafts your hardware into a low-bandwidth, mesh network army

Lance Ulanoff
Debugger
4 min readJun 1, 2021

--

An army of connected Echoes. Image: Lance Ulanoff

Next to my desk, I have my very first Amazon Echo. The almost foot-tall cylinder bears little resemblance to the current fourth-gen fabric-covered ball design. Even so, Amazon is conscripting my smart speaker, the latest models, and all Echoes in between into its long-gestating, neighbor-created, low-bandwidth mesh network: Sidewalk.

It’s been almost two years since Amazon announced the 900MHz network intended to bridge the gap between short-range Wi-Fi and Bluetooth and more powerful long-range connectivity options like LTE and 5G. Back then, I wasn’t entirely sure I understood Amazon’s plan. I like the idea of ubiquitous, low-energy connectivity for smart home devices in and around the home and was intrigued by the concept of Amazon Fetch, a dog collar that could connect with the network and help you find your lost dog even if your dog ran away from home.

--

--

Debugger
Debugger

Published in Debugger

Debugger is a former publication from Medium about consumer technology and gadgets. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Lance Ulanoff
Lance Ulanoff

Written by Lance Ulanoff

Tech expert, journalist, social media commentator, amateur cartoonist and robotics fan.

Responses (3)