![]() I added some rubber feet to the corners of the frame to give a little gap between the wall and the frame probably only 2mm, but enough to greatly boost the sound coming out. ![]() Plan 2 was to abandon the flush wall design. And while you could speak to Alexa with the frame against the wall, you had to raise you voice which felt unnatural. The microphone is on the left side of the tablet and I wasn't going to drill a hole in the frame there as it would look ugly. It also didn't solve the second problem which was getting sound into the frame the Fire needs to hear what you say - it's Alexa after all. It helped a bit, but really not as much as I'd hoped. This turned out to be remarkably ineffective. The frame is mounted below eye level so the bottom is usually unobserved, and the holes are under the speakers on the tablet. This seemed like a good idea as the holes are essentially hidden. Plan 1 was to drill some holes in the bottom of the frame. ![]() ![]() With the box against the wall, the sounds is somewhat muffled. The Fire has two speakers which, once in the frame, are facing down. This introduces the problem of letting the sound out. For unnecessary aesthetic reasons, I want the frame to be flush with the wall I think it looks neater.
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