Apple, IBM To Bring iPads To 5 Million Elderly Japanese 67
itwbennett writes: An initiative between Apple, IBM and Japan Post Holdings could put iPads in the hands of up to 5 million members of Japan's elderly population. The iPads, which will run custom apps from IBM, will supplement Japan Post's Watch Over service where, for a monthly fee, postal employees check on elderly residents and relay information on their well-being to family members.
Oh Dear... (Score:2, Interesting)
This sounds just like the LA school district iPad program.
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Re:Oh Dear... (Score:5, Funny)
LOL, but it's two vendors ... IBM and Apple, right there in the headline ... so it's twice as good!
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Yep. Single vendor solution. What could possibly go wrong?
Multiple vendors does what exactly? Increased internal support costs. Spread it around to more of your "friends" perhaps?
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It depends. If they roll out the damned thing without a viable test program, it will properly be a disaster. If they actually got some good, meaningful feedback and incorporated that into the program, then it could very well work. The LA school district failed for a lot of different reasons, but it wasn't necessarily a failing of the technology itself.
iPads are a much better fit for light consumer-level computing tasks than just about anything else out there. They're very easy to pick up and use, and a
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Not to mention the fact that this news is REALLY going to piss off my grandfather in heaven.
Nice to see (Score:2, Insightful)
NIce to see Apple and IBM profit further from the nanny state.
"The moral test of government" (Score:2)
NIce to see Apple and IBM profit further from the nanny state.
The geek seems to moving to the farthest right of the political spectrum. He is, after all, the creator of the "SJW" social justice warrior meme which the right has found so useful.
The postman, the doctor, the lineman, the visiting nurse. the preacher and the fireman, share a special place in American folklore and legend.
Loneliness and isolation, the need for human contact and support, is something a rural community, the elderly, the ill and the homebound come to understand profoundly.
"...the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and the handicapped. " ~ Last Speech of Hubert H. Humphrey
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So that's what SJW stands for? Huh. The only context I've ever seen the term used has been on Slashdot, often on Apple stories, so I assumed it stood for Steve Jobs Worshipper. But now you mention it... :)
Re:Grandma, stop Facetimeing me! (Score:4, Funny)
big dropoff in new tech over age 70 (Score:3)
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From what I've seen, learning difficulty is the issue. At that age, rote education was how you learned. You absolutely cannot learn anything worthwhile to do with tech through rote education. To see if this is your parents/grandparent's issue, ask them to save a file in a standard editor. Show them how if they do not know.
Then, ask them to do the exact same thing, except with an editor that has a different name (no, not just renamed, but something that looks at least slightly different, but uses the exa
Re:big dropoff in new tech over age 70 (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess you must be over 70.
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For kicks, the two separate programs should be Office 2003 and any Office version above 2007.
Disinterest and fear (Score:2)
I dont know whether it is cost, learning difficulty, or conservativism.
In my experience it's mostly disinterest and/or fear. They haven't needed it most of their lives, they are quite set in their ways and they aren't terribly interested in learning something new. They will loudly proclaim how they "just don't get this stuff" but usually that's an excuse for not wanting to learn because their brains work fine. If it's really easy the might give it a whirl but if learning requires real effort they usually cannot be bothered.
The guys who own my company are about 70. They are
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You don't need to be very 'tech savvy' to use an iPad. When they first came out, I gave one to my now 84 year old mother. She's still using the iPad 1, still doing email (it's for old people after all), her calendar, Flickr and a couple of simple apps and games.
It's pretty much perfect for her.
If IBM doesn't screw up the software (doubtful) this could well be useful. And, of course, IBM could easily port the software to Android or even Windows Phone - we're just talking about a fairly simple hardware pla
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My grandpa was the most flexible-minded elder I ever encountered but even he didn't want to change the way he did things once he learned how to do something. He made the transitions from Windows 3.11 to 98se to XP well enough because I minimized the impact by using "classic view" setups and carrying forward as much of his software as possible.
He wasn't afraid to explore new things. Just that, once he learned them, he wanted it to be static and unchanging. Why would you change something that works? One w
RADIOFAX (Score:2)
One weekend, I came home and he showed me the radio-fax kit he'd bought. Say what??? It was a receiver that plugged into the headphone jack of a shortwave radio on one side and the serial port of the computer on the other side. The software would record and decode faxes of weather maps that were broadcast over shortwave then print them on the DeskJet 500c. But, when this kind of thing became widely available on the internet, he wouldn't switch until either they stopped broadcasting or the software didn't survive an OS upgrade. I forget which.
The geek needs to take a closer look at analog systems and HF radio.
Rafiofax is over ninety years old and still very much alive. NOAA RADIOFAX [noaa.gov] If you think terrestrial satellite data services are expensive and limited try pricing off-shore marine.
WR-G33EM Marine Receiver [winradio.com]
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Do you have the URL to that PEW study? I am curious about over 30, 40, 50, 60, etc.
A glimpse into our future (Score:5, Insightful)
What do you think society is going to be like when so many of the people not having kids get older? It's going to look like this, where you hire services to check in on you regularly and make sure you are not dead or needing help...
Even as the population gets more dispersed, there's a need for things like this so family who lives far away can still make sure parents are OK.
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Even close neighbors not in daily contact. (Score:2)
I do have a number of neighbors around me I know pretty well, that I say hi to - when I see them.
But I don't see them every day. In winter you may not see them for some time because people stay inside mostly.
Even a close community around you is no replacement for someone that checks on you daily.
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What do you think society is going to be like when so many of the people not having kids get older?
It's going to look a lot like Florida, where the local sheriff's office makes checking-up phone calls to its elderly population every single morning as part of their primary duty. It's a great way to make sure the Sheriff gets re-elected that way.
It's going to look like this, where you hire services to check in on you regularly and make sure you are not dead or needing help... Even as the population gets more dispersed, there's a need for things like this so family who lives far away can still make sure parents are OK.
On a side-note, it seems like the Japanese have found a replacement business model for their postal service. We could try doing something similar in the US.
Technology can only get us so far. There always needs to be a certain amount of (live non-remote) human conta
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Actually, in Asia, elderly parents usually live with their kids. That something like this is needed is more a sign of the rising number of dual income households [stats-japan.com] where the elderly parents are left home alone during the day.
California (which has a high Asian immigrant population who didn't budget for nursing home expenses) tried to tackle this with Adult Day Health Care [ca.gov] - basically day care for the elderl
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I'm concerned about that in my own future. No kids, and given our family histories, I have a better than even chance of outliving my GF.
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Lesson 1: Just because your VCR keeps telling you it's noon doesn't mean you should keep eating all the time.
Good use for Apple Watch, perhaps? (Score:2)
I wonder if it has anything to do with this (Score:3)
iPad Continues to Lead Declining Tablet Market in First Quarter
http://www.macrumors.com/2015/... [macrumors.com]
The point is not that Apple is leading, but that the market is shriking. This might be a way for Apple to ship more iPads.
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My iPad 2 is still in use now too. I bought it on release day and use it myself until the iPad Air 2 came out. I used my iPad 2 longer than I have used any laptop I have ever owned and it is still being used in my house. Apple kept good software support on the two and after 4 years the battery still lasts all day long. What more could you want.
My Killer Watch (Score:3)
This is right in line with my desire for a watch that asks me a reasonably simple math problem every day and then kills me if I get it wrong three times. Sadly this isn't one of the features Apple has included in its latest wearable attempt...
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Oh, then that could be an interesting bug. Especially if you have a tattoo...
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This is japan. It will come preloaded with tons of bookmarks for catgirls websites.
Grumble (Score:2)
I can't even get my USPS driver to deliver packages to my door for the last few weeks.
"The road's in poor shape." "We've improved the road twice since I bought my house. It's better now than it was when I moved in and it was good enough to deliver packages before we did anything at all." "We switched to LLVs and they don't get around as well as the personal vehicles did." "The only vehicles that have ever delivered mail on my route since I moved here have been LLVs." "I'll look into it."
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S^3 (Score:1)
So they're implementing a Solid State Society?
iPads are not senior-friendly (Score:2)
Hopefully I'm wrong,
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Nope, I'm not as old as you and I've been in IT for decades, the UI is getting weird from my point of view.
Take Google+ and Youtube... worst UI ever.
I don't want to say I am not adapting, I want to say this generation has it's own version of logic and UI design.
It's probably a bit of both, I admit I am no longer enchanted with gadgets and tech, living on a farm with no tech around sounds good in that romanticized way we look at things when we dream.
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Lulz (Score:1)
Look at how the LA schools iPad program turned out.
Also note that there is an article stating the sensors on the watch may not with dark skin... LOL... Really Apple?
http://fusion.net/story/60771/... [fusion.net]