Okay, one last note. Echo is not a personal device. Anybody in the room can request something. This is its appeal to us, and swears at being able to use only a personal device to know what's available to all of us.
My family all want to participate but I'm the only techy one. So when you all use "I," I must use "we." I could always click on a song and play it on my PC; my spouse is barely online, able only to search for recipes (but not print them) and read email (but not respond to them).
Being able to make my music available to him is the magic of Echo. Tablets, phones, personal devices don't work for "us." He also has eye problems, and watching a video on a tablet would not be optimal. We do have a Fire stick so we can watch video together on our big TV.
Once I made choices only for me, and wrote workarounds so that others with fewer chops could benefit from them, too. Now I must think about "us."
Echo is just wonderful for non-techy family members, including our mid-sized grandchildren. If only everybody knew what was available and was able to ask for it specifically. (Alexa, as you all know, misunderstands requests, often hilariously, and especially during this season, is likely to offer wacky versions of popular song titles.)
Mike, we have thousands of songs, and like to make very specific requests. Your usage and ours is totally different. Thanks for chiming in, though. I have many friends in phone support, and they are all trained to say, "Sorry, can't do that" even though each would take it as a personal challenge to write a workaround to do it. None have Echos or I would have asked them to!
Btw, I see the Kindle users asking the same questions about their libraries. They too want printed lists of what books they own. They once could generate lists but cannot any more.
(And... I do have an emergency phone that I use in the car for gps directions, and the occasional grocery-store lookup. He has a flip phone he swears at a lot. These are personal choices.)