Lifelong partners grapple with how and whether to stay together when one can’t care for the other.
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No matter how easy-to-use a manufacturer may believe its tech products are, they may still baffle the elderly.
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Nastily titled article trumped by the plethora of comments.
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Oliver Sacks -- on learning new skills to keep changing your brain.
A good article on computer vision and the uses of cameras -- many applications in senior housing, nursing homes, and hospitals.
A thoughtful commentary on whether 90 can realistically become the new 50.
Devices to help people with vision problems have better lives.
The reality of sluggish and flaky wireless networks.
Tech companies targeting the senior market -- please read.
Baby Boomers are more downbeat than other age groups, with 80% dissatisfied about the 'way things are going in the country today.'
Joseph Coughlin, MIT AgeLab writes about "What's Next? How Technology will Revolutionize the Boomer Generation."
Interfaces with the mesh network to accurately pinpoint a resident location.
Not so charmingly titled -- about aging in place with a high end home care service from the bay area's Living Well at Home
Arguing that additional care/costs may be unwarranted and not to automatically accept increases.
Great headline, but the article says, maybe not.
National 'Village' (a la Beacon Hill Village) Network event -- describing Villages 101.
Three in five Americans with chronic disease say using a home medical device would improve their health.
Asking 'does it make sense to buy a Nintendo Wii anymore?'
Twin Cities experiments in villages, CCRCs, backyard pods and more to house growing senior population.