Senior care enabled through inexpensive DIY kit

Smart home kit enables remote, unobtrusive tracking of seniors 

People Power has released Presence Care, a kit consisting of a gateway and five sensors, for $299, which can be self-installed in the home or apartment of seniors. Intelligence in the cloud quickly learns residents’ routines and alerts a circle of trusted family and friends if activities, such as frequent bathroom use, oversleeping, wandering, or even falls, are outside of the norm. Global News Wire

dis-rup-shun: Providing a simple, cost-effective system for keeping tabs on seniors is critical for keeping families who more frequently live far apart, close. Senior care is perhaps one of the most important uses of machine learning, as changes in sleep and bathroom habits correlate highly with illness, and addressing oncoming illness early can prevent hospital admissions. Hospital admissions in the U.S. for seniors cost an average of $10,000 and often precipitate a move to a higher level of residential care, ranging from $50,000 per year for independent living to $80,000 for assisted living. Expect significant use of sensor technologies and machine learning to keep families in closer touch with seniors.

Smart stove knobs prevent kitchen fires

By 2022, American households are expected to spend more than $63 billion on smart home products and services. One new product from Inirv is smart stove knobs that sense when a stove has been left on for longer than normal, and signals to others as well as shuts off the stove. The knobs can also be controlled through an app to remotely adjust cooking temperatures, or to turn on based on timer settings. The app can also be controlled through smart speakers such as Echo and Google Home. Hypepotamus

dis-rup-shun: The smart home industry is awash with gadgets that don’t make sense, but products that increase safety and convenience without requiring a complete replacement of expensive appliances is a winner. One can easily visualize a time when smart stove knobs could be required by building codes, and a time when smart knobs are included in all new stove models. Just like power windows or door locks on cars, in a few short years, many of today’s smart home innovations will be expected standards in 100% of new homes.

iPhone now blocks SPAM calls

A feature built into Apple’s latest iPhone software version, iOS 13.0, automatically blocks SPAM calls, or most any call that is unknown. For numbers that you have not recently called or that are not in your contacts list, calls are routed directly to voice mail. CNBC

dis-rup-shun: For people who have been using third party apps to block robot callers (I use Robokiller), the built-in app prevents one from having two voice mailboxes, as well as an additional annual fee, as Robokiller is $30 per year — a veritable fortune in a world of $.99 apps. Features like these keep us interested in the latest updates for our expensive phones, and help us justify spending $1000 on the latest and greatest. Expect high value features like this one to keep us interested in the newest phone models and software releases.

Sony PlayStation 5: faster, richer, better

Sony’s next console, the PS5, will feature solid state storage, eliminating a hard drive and increasing loading times. The device features better graphics capabilities, utilizing ray tracing technology, and a controller with rich haptic feedback, enabling you to feel the bumpy ground when you swerve your race car off the track. Wired

dis-rup-shun: Despite the evolution of computer and mobile gaming that has progressed as much if not more than any other technology since its humble origins, game enthusiasts love consoles. Apple’s and Google’s games services will engage many a business traveler or soccer mom, but enthusiasts want premium experiences that only consoles can provide. Despite efforts to grow the game market, the three big console makers understand the power of market segmentation (as well as the Cash Cow of the BCG brand matrix), and keep milking enthusiasts by providing ever greater console experiences.

AI cares for persons with dementia

National Institute of Health taps AI for persons with dementia

People Power (the author’s employer) announced that the NIH is now offering, at no cost, to install smart home systems powered by AI that cares for persons with dementia. The sensor based system alerts care givers when an occupant wanders, experiences abnormal sleep or bathroom habits. The smart home solution is developed by People Power and University of California Berkeley’s Psychophysiology Laboratory, headed by Dr. Robert W. Levenson. PRWeb

dis-rup-shun: The annual costs of assisted living or nursing homes average nearly $90,000. A smart home system that costs a few hundred dollars once, and less than $100 per month to monitor, can save over $7000 per month. A few motion sensors placed strategically in a main room and a bedroom, paired with cloud analytics, quickly learns residents’ habits and notifies a circle of trusted friends when patterns deviate. The high correlations between changes in sleeping, bathroom, walking habits and illness provide an early warning to care givers who can take appropriate action to avoid hospitalization or institutionalization. AI data analytics determine which events are worthy of an alert.

Apple’s credit card squeezes AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile

Apple, with its new consumer credit vehicle, can dis-intermediate wireless carriers who use handset financing plans to lock in subscribers. Apple can more easily invert the relationship so that consumers are leasing phones directly from Apple. CNBC

dis-rup-shun: To go a step further, Apple, as banker and handset provider, is now in a position to resell network access from AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile/Sprint and become a virtual network (MVNO) operator. And a step beyond that, why wouldn’t Apple sell other commodities from its payment platform, including electricity and streaming TV services, to name a few? It’s a tough time to be an incumbent service provider.

Google’s Stadia game platform changes the electronic gaming economy

On Monday, Google demonstrated its cloud based streaming game platform, Stadia. Stadia, like Netflix, offers a library of game content that can be streamed to essentially any device, meaning your favorite games can follow you across various devices as you move about your day. The entry level service is free, with premium offerings for better graphics and premium titles. The $135 billion electronic gaming industry is projected to more than double to $300 billion by 2025. CNBC

dis-rup-shun: The gaming economy, like most, has segments ranging from hard core enthusiasts to casual, occasional gamers. While Google will likely not disrupt the hard core gamers who spend big money on souped-up PCs, fast broadband speeds, and premium titles, it will grow the gaming industry by making many more titles available to the mass market, who may be tiring of streaming reruns of the Office. This shift will impact the already beleaguered console makers whose expensive devices and titles will be not be necessary for most young households looking for entertainment.

THX updates its Deep Note — still worth a trip to the movies?

THX has one of the most successful brand signatures — not just a logo, not a tag line, but an audio/visual experience. The new immersive trailer integrates 4K video with the signature acoustics and ends with the familiar synthesizer crescendo. See it here. TechCrunch

dis-rup-shun: Despite many expensive home theater offerings, few can replace the body thumping exhilaration of the THX trailer. It is almost worth the price of a movie ticket, and serves as an important reminder that the in-theater experience is special. Many sources of entertainment compete for the entertainment dollar. Expect the theater experience to continue to improve to differentiate from the living room.

Wired cartoon of the day