Viewing digital literacy and learning not as an unnecessary use of time but as an investment in independence and quality of life.
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CEO Gerard Kleisterlee: "where we have our place and where we are investing and focusing: things like remote monitoring and technologies that help to cure or to monitor and manage these diseases."
Idea House at AAHSA (Nov 8-11 in Chicago) has contributions from 25 companies, 90% of the products available now.
Considering remote technologies (like GE QuietCare) and the question of privacy.
The CEO of the International Council on Active Aging summed up the game's popularity with one word, "explosion."
In the dubious title category, Eric Taub writes about the growing use among seniors of e-mail and other tech.
The move of boomers from suburbs to car-free city condominiums has not and may never happen.
Seniors will need to decide whether to embrace these tools -- libraries are also getting into it.
Google and other search tools keep your brain sharp.
For those seniors with diminishing vision, note the mention of the iPod touch with spoken commands and a GPS device that reads streets and store names aloud.
AARP in this South Florida area picks up costs for those who cannot pay.
Appears not to matter how much or whethr it is part-time or self-employment.
Could the resolve to remain self-sufficient in later life be self-defeating?
Daughter gives mother a computer -- she goes to training.
Camera worn around the neck during the day -- helps to prompt memory.
Obvious question if this is proven, shouldn't cognitive fitness software act more like video games?
A business starts up in California to connect young people to isolated seniors.
Services and community form around the residents who continue to live at home.