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View Full Version : Australia, first nation to deploy in home moniotoring of people



Glass
2nd April 2014, 11:07 PM
This is under the guise of monitoring elderly people such as your parents. To make sure they have taken their pills or have not gone walk about. It will enable more elderly people the "dignity" of staying in their homes longer than would normally be the case as they get older.

System developed by the GoPro creator.

So if it is not for the children it is for the elderly.


Hills Ltd signs exclusive distie deal for connected home

Australia is first global market for device from Nest, GoPro designer.
A new home sensor is being launched in Australia with an interesting sales pitch: that it will help relatives avoid having to ring their elderly parents to nag about missed medication and mealtimes.
Called Lively (http://www.mylively.com.au/), the product is the latest entrant to the emerging connected home market and an attempt to sell a home monitoring system that doesn't give users a creeping feeling of unease about Big Brother.
Instead of video cameras or GPS monitoring, the system relies on "activity" sensors not much bigger than a box of matches that are attached to certain objects – for example, a key ring, pill box or the front door.

While the system can't report for certain if medication has been taken, it can "infer" activity - sensors connect wirelessly to a hub in the house, which then updates an online activity report. The idea is that family members can check a dashboard on their phone or computer to see if an elderly relative has been using a pill box, for example, or perhaps if they have left the house.
Australia is the first international market for the product, which was co-founded in Silicon Valley by an ex-Apple worker and designed by the same firm that designed the Nest Smart Thermostat (recently bought by Google for US$3.2 billion) and the GoPro HERO3. In Australia, Lively is being distributed by Hills, the company that invented the iconic Hill’s Hoist washing line in the 1940s.
The significance of Lively is the product's price and that it is less intrusive than previous attempts at home monitoring, argued the product's co-founder David Glickman.
"What we found in our research is that all the solutions before were too intrusive," he said. "Like a video camera in home to watch your mother. Not surprisingly elders said 'I don't want that in my home'. They were quite expensive and complicated to setup."

Glickman is hoping the price of Lively – which costs $175 plus a monthly service fee of $19.95 – will be attractive when compared with other medication compliance and video monitoring systems, which he said can cost $500 or more.
"A lot of senior living communities are actually not for profit. Other difference between a $500 to $600 system and $175 system is massive, it changes the game for them."
Lively also doesn't require a home internet connection or Internet plan – the system uses a 2G data connection.

Opportunities ahead
The product arrives at a time when the home automation category is tipped for significant growth in Australia over the next few years.
Analyst firm Telsyte is predicting revenues from "smart home automation" devices in Australia will grow from $160 million this year to $917 million in 2017. Potential sellers include wireless sensors, smart light bulbs, connected locks for security and connected irrigation systems for "smart gardening".
The market for devices like is also likely to get bigger as populations continue to age. Around 1.6 million Australians will access age services each year by 2023, up from 880,000 in 2009, according to the Aged Care Industry Information Technology Council (ACIITC).
Industry groups have recently called for the government to provide funding to help increase ICT adoption (http://www.australianageingagenda.com.au/2014/03/05/calls-government-invest-aged-care/) in the aged care sector.

"This is a worldwide phenomenon," said Glickman. "If you look at the 80-90s demographic, in the last 20 years that demographic has almost doubled. The aging population continues to grow, people are living longer and they want to stay in own homes."



Link and a nice little product promo video here (http://www.crn.com.au/News/381632,hills-ltd-signs-exclusive-distie-deal-for-connected-home.aspx?eid=4&edate=20140403&utm_source=20140403&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily_newsletter)

vacuum
2nd April 2014, 11:19 PM
Google just bought that company (Nest). It's good to know google is moving toward physically monitoring people in their homes now.

Soon old people will also be mandated to use Google's self-driving cars as well, for safety reasons.

Also, Google-glass will instruct the old people when to take their pills via heads-up display notifications.

Boston dynamics, which Google also bought, will be providing the robotic-assistance to allow people to move around in powered chairs and exoskeletons.

And lets not forget, Google is firmly moving towards life-extension genetic research business.

Ponce
3rd April 2014, 12:02 AM
Well, today I became 74 years old :) ..........do I need one of those dujiquis today or do I have to be 75?.....I don't even take any pills of any kind so why do I even need it?

V

Horn
3rd April 2014, 02:33 AM
Well, today I became 74 years old :) ..........do I need one of those dujiquis today or do I have to be 75?.....I don't even take any pills of any kind so why do I even need it?

V

Happy Birthday, Ponce.

And to a pillless 75th.

singular_me
3rd April 2014, 04:12 AM
it always starts with a good intention.

Glass
3rd April 2014, 04:20 AM
I could make a lot of money of this...... I'm going to have some problems going forward.

Twisted Titan
3rd April 2014, 04:54 AM
it always starts with a good intention.

Thats why the road to Hell is paved with those bricks

Hatha Sunahara
3rd April 2014, 09:52 AM
Good intentions don't always lead to Hell. But in this case they certainly do.

Australia, and perhaps the rest of the English speaking countries, as well as the EU have gone down the road of 'unrepresentative government'. That is, they pass laws that are odious and burdensome to the people, without honest public debate. These laws are then enforced with authoritarian panache. If you believe it's for your safety, you probably also believe that you are free.

What has emerged is a class of elite government administrators who presume to know better than 'the masses' what is good for them. They have denied access to the political system to all but their class. They cannot be unseated by voting. History is full of ugly examples of how this ends.


Hatha

Spectrism
3rd April 2014, 09:59 AM
Seems the aussies are just a bunch of Shielas.

monty
4th April 2014, 07:09 AM
Well, today I became 74 years old :) ..........do I need one of those dujiquis today or do I have to be 75?.....I don't even take any pills of any kind so why do I even need it? V

¡Feliz cumpliaños Ponce!

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