Technology
Alexa+ lets you order food like a real conversation
Food delivery drones launch in NJ
FOX Business correspondent Madison Alworth reports on drone food delivery services launching in New Jersey on ‘America Reports.’
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You’re hungry, and your stomach’s already growling. Normally, you’d grab your phone, open your favorite delivery app and start scrolling through endless restaurant lists. Tap a few menus, pick a few items and before you know it, you’ve built your order piece by piece.
But with Amazon Alexa+, you can skip all that tapping and scrolling. Just tell Alexa what you’re in the mood for, change your mind halfway or add something extra as you go, like you’re chatting with someone taking your order.
That’s the new idea behind Alexa+. Amazon has rolled out a voice-powered food ordering feature that lets you get delivery from Uber Eats and Grubhub without ever opening an app. Just say what you want, and Alexa handles the rest.
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ALEXA.COM BRINGS ALEXA+ TO YOUR BROWSER
Amazon Alexa+ now lets users order food from Uber Eats and Grubhub by voice, turning delivery into a back-and-forth conversation instead of a series of taps. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
What you need to use Alexa+
Now, before you start ordering with your voice, there are a few quick setup steps.
- You need an Alexa+ compatible device, like an Echo Show
- You must link your Uber Eats or Grubhub account in the Alexa app
- Your past orders can sync automatically for quick reordering
Once that’s done, it becomes a hands-free experience.
How to set up Alexa+ for food ordering (step by step)
We set this up using the Amazon Alexa app on a phone, and these are the exact steps we followed. The menus may look slightly different depending on your device.
- Open the Alexa app on your phone
- Tap “More” (it usually has three horizontal lines)
- Tap “Alexa+ Store”
- Use the search bar and type in Uber or Grubhub.
- Tap the service you want
- When it appears, tap to open it.
- Tap “Connect” or “Enable” (You may see a page from “pitangui.amazon.com” during setup. That’s part of Amazon’s system and is safe if you open it from the Alexa app. )
- Next, sign in to your account on your phone
- Tap “Grant access”
- Tap “Continue”
- Tap “Close” to return to the app
After we linked our Grubhub account, we got a confirmation email saying everything was successfully connected. Once that’s all done, it becomes a hands-free experience.
To actually place an order, go to your Echo device and say, “Alexa, I want to order food,” then follow the prompts on the screen. Note: the feature is still rolling out and works best on newer Echo Show devices.
You can also manage or remove the connection anytime in the Alexa app by going to: Alexa App > Menu > Settings > Manage Alexa+ Services Unlink & Revoke Permissions
How Alexa+ actually builds your order
After you’re set up, this is where things start to change. For years, voice assistants followed a simple pattern. You ask something. It answers. That’s it.
With Amazon Alexa+, that model shifts. Instead of giving one command at a time, you can carry on a back-and-forth conversation.
You might start with:
- “Show me Mexican food”
- “Actually, let’s do pizza”
- “Add a large pepperoni with extra cheese”
- “Wait, make that two”
The system updates your order in real time. If you change your mind, it adjusts instantly on screen. Even better, it only jumps in when you need help. That means fewer interruptions and a smoother flow.
GRUBHUB CONFIRMS DATA BREACH AMID EXTORTION CLAIMS
With Alexa+, Amazon is pushing voice ordering beyond basic commands, letting users browse restaurants, customize meals and check delivery status through natural conversation. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
How Alexa+ lets you customize your order
This is where things start to feel different from anything we’ve seen before.
You can explore like you’re talking to a person
You don’t need exact menu names. Say something like “meat lovers pizza,” and Alexa+ finds the closest match. Want dessert? Just ask. Curious what’s popular? Ask that too.
You can change your mind mid-order
Most apps make you backtrack. Alexa+ lets you pivot on the fly. Add items. Remove them. Adjust quantities. Switch restaurants entirely. Everything updates live on your screen.
You see the full breakdown before you pay
Before checkout, you’ll get a clear summary:
- Item names
- Quantities
- Individual prices
- Total cost
That transparency matters, especially when small add-ons can quickly add up.
You can track your delivery with your voice
Once your order is placed, you can simply ask:
“Alexa, where’s my food?”
No need to dig through notifications or open another app.
Why Amazon is pushing Alexa+ now
This isn’t just about food delivery. Amazon is testing a bigger idea. It wants Alexa+ to adapt based on what you’re trying to do. Ordering food needs flexibility. Checking the weather doesn’t. So instead of one rigid interaction style, Alexa+ shifts its behavior depending on the task. Food ordering is just the beginning. Amazon is already hinting at future uses like grocery shopping and travel planning.
GRUBHUB LAUNCHES FIRST-EVER COMMERCIAL DRONE FOOD DELIVERY SERVICE IN NEW JERSEY
Amazon’s new Alexa+ food-ordering feature connects with Uber Eats and Grubhub, allowing users to build, change and track delivery orders without opening an app.
What this means to you
This feature sounds convenient, and in many ways it is. Still, there are a few things worth thinking about before you start ordering dinner out loud. First, it makes ordering easier. That’s great for speed, but it can also make spending feel effortless. When ordering becomes a conversation, it’s easy to keep adding items without paying attention to the total. Second, your data matters. Linking accounts means Amazon can connect your voice activity with your food habits. That includes what you order, when you order and how often. Third, it changes how you interact with technology. Instead of tapping and scrolling, you’re relying on AI to interpret what you mean. That saves time, but it also means trusting the system to get things right. Finally, it may reshape your habits. If this becomes second nature, opening apps could start to feel old-fashioned before long.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
Ordering food has always been simple. Now it’s becoming conversational. That shift might sound small, but it signals something bigger. Technology is moving away from commands and toward natural interaction. The goal is to make devices feel less like tools and more like assistants. The real question is how far that goes. If your device can handle dinner tonight, what else will it manage tomorrow?
And here’s something to think about: At what point does convenience start making decisions for you instead of helping you make them? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
Taylor Farms pulls iceberg lettuce from the US market after cyclosporiasis outbreak
Food producer Taylor Farms released a statement on the Cyclospora outbreak Friday, confirming that it’s “voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico from the US market.” Reuters reports that, according to a source, Taylor Farms told customers like Yum Brands owner Taco Bell and the food distributor Sysco on Thursday to pull shredded lettuce that had been produced initially as 5-pound bags at a facility in Guanajuato, Mexico, from distribution.
Taco Bell said on Thursday that “The affected ingredient from our supplier is being indefinitely removed from our supply chain nationwide and will be replaced within 24 hours in select states.”
The Cyclospora parasite infects humans’ small intestine, can take up to one to two weeks to incubate, and causes symptoms including “watery diarrhea, with frequent bowel movements… vomiting, body aches, headache, low-grade fever, and other flu-like symptoms,” that may seem to go away and then come back more than once.
As The Verge reported this week, not all of the reported cases have been linked to Taco Bell, and Taylor Farms is a giant, which has said it sells more than $7 billion in produce every year and makes two out of every five of the salad kits sold in grocery stores. However, its name doesn’t appear on most of those items, and while the extent of the outbreak is still under investigation, the CDC has said it’s also looking into illnesses and outbreaks in other states that are unrelated.
Based on information provided yesterday by the FDA, Taylor Farms de Mexico is voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico from the U.S. market.
While the FDA traceback is indicating a specific independent farm that represents less than 1% of the U.S.’s iceberg lettuce supply as the potential source of the outbreak, we have removed all iceberg lettuce from the region indefinitely.
It hasn’t identified other companies or products to avoid yet. ProPublica’s Annie Waldman reports that the tracing effort is working without more than 240 consumer safety specialists who left as the Trump administration cut funding to federal health agencies, and the CDC scaled back its Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) that worked with 10 states.
The Washington Post also mentions that a few months ago, the FDA pushed back the compliance deadline on implementing its Requirements for Additional Traceability Records for Certain Foods (Food Traceability Final Rule) from January 20th, 2026, until July 20th, 2028. Its requirement for standardized record-keeping about goods and shipments could’ve made finding the “specific independent farm” tied to the outbreak easier and faster.
This all follows statements from the CDC and FDA saying the “explosive diarrhea parasite” outbreak has been linked to shredded iceberg lettuce served at Taco Bell locations across five states: Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia. In Michigan alone, there are over 5,000 reported cases, with 102 reports of hospitalization.
According to the FDA, “FDA and state partners are actively investigating the source and scope of the contamination. Because the investigation remains ongoing, additional implicated brands, restaurants, retailers, or distribution channels may be identified as the investigation continues.”
Technology
Fox News AI Newsletter: IBM’s AI warning sends ‘shockwave’
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.
IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:
– IBM sends ‘shockwave’ through tech industry with AI warning
– Dimon urges calm over fear about AI’s impact on jobs: ‘Stop being breathless over it’
– AI is changing modern dating, but experts warn it’s making people ‘relationally stupid’
MARKET JOLT: Shares of IBM were down more than 23% when the market opened on Tuesday, raising fresh questions about whether companies are seeing enough near-term returns from artificial intelligence spending.
COOL DOWN: JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon on Wednesday said there is still a lot of uncertainty over how AI will impact the workforce and people shouldn’t be “breathless” in their concerns as new technologies have historically created new jobs.
JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon speaks onstage during day two of the America Business Forum at the Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida, on Nov. 6, 2025. (Alexander Tamargo/Getty Images for America Business Forum)
PLUG PULLED: New York’s decision to pause the construction of large artificial intelligence data centers is drawing criticism from some lawmakers and energy officials, who argue the move could weaken the United States’ ability to compete in the global AI race while encouraging investment to move elsewhere.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s AI data center pause is drawing criticism from lawmakers and industry leaders. (Shawn Dowd/Rochester Democrat and Chronicle / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)
RARE PRAISE: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., praised the late Sen. Lindsey Graham for backing legislation that would allow victims of nonconsensual AI-generated deepfake pornography to file civil lawsuits.
‘RELATIONALLY STUPID’: Artificial intelligence has seeped into almost every aspect of modern life, helping users plan vacations, create workout routines and tackle countless everyday tasks. Some have resorted to using it for their love lives by asking chatbots to help them write witty responses to messages, craft dating app profiles and work out relationship issues. However, relationship experts fear that the increased use of AI in dating could lead to disastrous results.
DIGITAL AXE: A group of 26 Meta employees sued the tech giant over accusations that it used AI-powered software to choose people for mass layoffs, disproportionately targeting workers with disabilities or those who took medical, parental or family leave.
LOCAL LIFT: Meta is expanding its massive data center project in Richland Parish, Louisiana, to 5 gigawatts of compute capacity, making it one of the largest data centers in history, the company announced Monday.
ACCOUNT CONTROL: There are few emails that make your stomach drop faster than one about “new privacy settings.” That usually means a company has moved another data switch, renamed a control or tucked a new choice inside an account menu you rarely visit. Google is now rolling out one of those changes for Search services. The setting is called Search Services History. It controls whether Google saves your activity from Search services when you are signed into your Google Account.
SCREEN FREE: A major university is taking aim at tech in a sweeping ban against electronic devices in an effort to “ensure students actually learn to think critically, strategically and independently without relying on AI,” according to administrators.
The University of Chicago has banned electronic devices for first-year law students as part of a broader effort to promote critical thinking and address the growing use of artificial intelligence in legal education. (iStock)
Subscribe now to get the Fox News Artificial Intelligence Newsletter in your inbox.
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Technology
Apple’s plot to crush OpenAI
Apple is suing OpenAI. The complaint is readable and intense, as these things often are, though many experts seem to think many of the allegations are just the ways things are done. So what does Apple really want here, and why is it picking such a public fight with OpenAI?
On this episode of The Vergecast, Nilay and David go through the lawsuit, and look at Apple’s history of splashy litigation to determine whether Apple is worried about a possible competitor or simply looking to capitalize on a weak moment for OpenAI. All this is happening as Apple ships the public betas of its new software, headlined by the new Siri AI, and we have thoughts about what it all means — and whether the new Siri is actually any good.
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