The growing ecosystem of devices and products serving peoples’ health and well-being shows us that innovators already see the opportunity to serve the fast-growing market for self-care among people 50 years of age and up.
For nearly twenty years, one thing has felt inevitable: when boomers reach “old age,” senior living demand will surge. And yet ..
ChatGPT Health builds on consumer use of today's ChatGPT so responses are informed by your health information and context.
The prize honors .lumen’s Glasses for the Blind, an AI-based device that applies autonomous driving technology adapted for pedestrians. Using computer vision and local processing, the headset understands the three-dimensional environment in real time without relying on the internet or pre-defined maps and guides the user through subtle vibrations indicating a safe direction to follow.
The United States faces a fundamental mismatch between surging demand and insufficient capacity.
Comments
From Scott Dingfield via Aging 2.0
Scott Dingfield Good question. At this point I'd say no. On one side, people need broadband, but on the other we see that more people are abandoning broadband in the home because of their smart phone. And then, as you've noted on your site, smart phone ownership for the 65+ is low. Leading me to say no to your question because broadband isn't factor in aging many people think it is...yet anyway.
From Stephen Johnston via Aging 2.0
Feels like connectivity itself is a basis, but broadband is secondary. You don't need much bandwidth to send a text message which can make someone's day, or convey key vital signs from a wearable device to a health service that indicates accelerated intervention is needed.