Fast Company interviewed older adults aged 70+ about their thoughts on possible robots in their homes.
You are here
Related News Articles
Policymakers live in mortal fear that family caregivers will similarly demand help.
Seven concepts dreamt up by dozens of designers in cities all over the world.
And there it was -- Healh Innovation@50+ Finalists -- and other links from Life@50+ in Boston.
AARP TEK's program to help older adults navigate new hardware, software and social media.
Considering technology to help older seniors be involved and connected.
Google sponsors program in Kansas City for teens to teach seniors about the Internet.
Research: radar motion detection is also an alternative to wearable devices like PERS.
Encouraging providers and insurers to invest in remote healthcare technologies.
Wireless access to residents, staff, and guests -- ordering meals, monitoring physical therapy and EHRs.
There's a bubble -- but does this wave of investor hysteria consider the use case for baby boomers?
Buy a lower-maintenance home, work part-time in retirement.
CCRC (one) sees future as 'Angie's List of Senior Living.' Lots of talk about this forever, but still virtually none are offering virtual senior living.
HomeSafe is not an mPERS device. Philips still doesn’t have an mPERS in the market.
Reader response to a Wall Street Journal question.
Young tech developers show ignorance of market size and scale of the people 20 or more years older than they are.
Technology interprets footstep patterns as a means of understanding well-being.
The answer, says Joseph Coughlin of MIT AgeLab, is both.
Fear about security, discrimination, new threats to cut programs for seniors.
Hearing-aid manufacturers and audiologists hope a new collaboration between them and Apple will help.
Per Grand View Research, monitoring services revenue, $1.2 billion in 2012, 50% CAGR, 2014 to 2020.