Forum Discussion
7 years ago
> @NorthDakotaGamer said:
> @Inna Minnit
>
> Those devices are also what I see for the lazy. For news, I actually read the newspaper online or listen to my local talk radio station so there is no need for a special device. For music, I just downloaded at my personal CD to my computer and then transferred them to my phone. I actually have to go in and click on them to play. The only other device I own besides a computer and phone is a Kindle that is strictly used to read books.
wel hurrah for you.
Im sorry but i find your attitude and judgemental comments really distasteful. All smart technology users must be lazy. Right.
Well, i happen to use smart technology to the fullest of its potential that i am able to, to assisst me with my daily life because i have complex health conditions and several disabilities. Whilst i dont use any amazon alexa devices, because i chose to go down the more open platform of google assisstant, i do use smart tech to help make my life easier. To control media devices yes whilst can save me tiring and painful short trips back and forth around a room, but more also to control my lights, medical equipment and security around my home.
I even use my own cctv camera to watch and speak to my cat when i am in hospital or having respite in a care home, and way more importantly i use extensive technology to manage my medical conditions, medical data, records, complex reminders for medications, weight management, observations, and organising my care shifts and appointment diary in a way that several people can share the same diary and edit is simultainously across a wide range of devices so that my diary is always up to date and flexible. My Drs think this is fantastic. i hand write notes at each appointment on my phone which autosaves the notes, they use my apps to review my readings at check ups and acute consultations, they can view my sleep apnoea data, my sleeping patterns, my blood sugar readings and insulin intake, my exercise levels and heart rate and i even have a device that records my heart rate and oxygen levels whilst i sleep/am accutely unwell which can either produce professional medical grade reports (the same kit the hospital use) or i can use it as a warning device for when i need to be calling an ambulance and go in to hospital. I can even email over compliance reports for my medication reminders which include records of how much breakthrough pain releif i have required over the month which has allowed the NHS funding teams to use it as supportive evidence for my level of medical need and also to agree to fund remedial massage as an alternative pain releif treatment because the pain data showed a significant drop in medication useage each time i had a massage. Now when i enter the consultation room my drs are asking for my phone to look over my data, because they dont see smart technology as a bit of fun, or as a lazy person's toy. They see that it has the potential to produce relevant information for them to use in diagnostics and condition management, and they also understand that smart technology is improving my independence. To the point that my local authority social service department has started to supply some disabled residents with smart home devices, like Alexa, to control electronics around the home in place of traditional home help care services because for some people (not all) this is far more adaptive and enabling than set care visits.
My Dad recently suffered a stroke at the age of 63. a catastrauphic stroke that has left him with a significant brain injury and paralysed down one side. I am now beginning to build a smart home system for his bedroom in the care home he has been moved to, so that he is able to control simple things like the tv, radio, lights etc for himself because at the moment he is completely unable to do these things without the help of another person and is getting increasingly frustrated. I also hope to teach him to use the technology to help him work out the day/time of day because he is terribly confused about that, and i want to hook him up with the cat cctv because he misses those animals to the point of regularly being in tears. He struggles to even dial a phone independently because of his brain injury, so when i am able to enable voice activated calling or video calls the next time i visit i know this will be a game changer for him and my mum who misses talking to him. He is a complete technophobe, but he is very much seeing the value of learning to use the technology and slowly building up a list of commands he can use to do things for himself wherever he is in his room, without having to press his call bell and wait for a nurse to be free to assist him.
So please do exscuse me for being offended and annoyed by your presumptive attitude towards smart technology and those who happen to find it a valuable addition to their lives. It might not be relevant to you, it might not be anything more than a bit of fun for fit and healthy people, or simply making their lives that little bit simpler, but there is a whole world of people out there and for some of us smart technology is a lifeline that is transforming our lives and giving us new found independance and control. Sometimes it pays to think outside of your own privalidged circle.
> @Inna Minnit
>
> Those devices are also what I see for the lazy. For news, I actually read the newspaper online or listen to my local talk radio station so there is no need for a special device. For music, I just downloaded at my personal CD to my computer and then transferred them to my phone. I actually have to go in and click on them to play. The only other device I own besides a computer and phone is a Kindle that is strictly used to read books.
wel hurrah for you.
Im sorry but i find your attitude and judgemental comments really distasteful. All smart technology users must be lazy. Right.
Well, i happen to use smart technology to the fullest of its potential that i am able to, to assisst me with my daily life because i have complex health conditions and several disabilities. Whilst i dont use any amazon alexa devices, because i chose to go down the more open platform of google assisstant, i do use smart tech to help make my life easier. To control media devices yes whilst can save me tiring and painful short trips back and forth around a room, but more also to control my lights, medical equipment and security around my home.
I even use my own cctv camera to watch and speak to my cat when i am in hospital or having respite in a care home, and way more importantly i use extensive technology to manage my medical conditions, medical data, records, complex reminders for medications, weight management, observations, and organising my care shifts and appointment diary in a way that several people can share the same diary and edit is simultainously across a wide range of devices so that my diary is always up to date and flexible. My Drs think this is fantastic. i hand write notes at each appointment on my phone which autosaves the notes, they use my apps to review my readings at check ups and acute consultations, they can view my sleep apnoea data, my sleeping patterns, my blood sugar readings and insulin intake, my exercise levels and heart rate and i even have a device that records my heart rate and oxygen levels whilst i sleep/am accutely unwell which can either produce professional medical grade reports (the same kit the hospital use) or i can use it as a warning device for when i need to be calling an ambulance and go in to hospital. I can even email over compliance reports for my medication reminders which include records of how much breakthrough pain releif i have required over the month which has allowed the NHS funding teams to use it as supportive evidence for my level of medical need and also to agree to fund remedial massage as an alternative pain releif treatment because the pain data showed a significant drop in medication useage each time i had a massage. Now when i enter the consultation room my drs are asking for my phone to look over my data, because they dont see smart technology as a bit of fun, or as a lazy person's toy. They see that it has the potential to produce relevant information for them to use in diagnostics and condition management, and they also understand that smart technology is improving my independence. To the point that my local authority social service department has started to supply some disabled residents with smart home devices, like Alexa, to control electronics around the home in place of traditional home help care services because for some people (not all) this is far more adaptive and enabling than set care visits.
My Dad recently suffered a stroke at the age of 63. a catastrauphic stroke that has left him with a significant brain injury and paralysed down one side. I am now beginning to build a smart home system for his bedroom in the care home he has been moved to, so that he is able to control simple things like the tv, radio, lights etc for himself because at the moment he is completely unable to do these things without the help of another person and is getting increasingly frustrated. I also hope to teach him to use the technology to help him work out the day/time of day because he is terribly confused about that, and i want to hook him up with the cat cctv because he misses those animals to the point of regularly being in tears. He struggles to even dial a phone independently because of his brain injury, so when i am able to enable voice activated calling or video calls the next time i visit i know this will be a game changer for him and my mum who misses talking to him. He is a complete technophobe, but he is very much seeing the value of learning to use the technology and slowly building up a list of commands he can use to do things for himself wherever he is in his room, without having to press his call bell and wait for a nurse to be free to assist him.
So please do exscuse me for being offended and annoyed by your presumptive attitude towards smart technology and those who happen to find it a valuable addition to their lives. It might not be relevant to you, it might not be anything more than a bit of fun for fit and healthy people, or simply making their lives that little bit simpler, but there is a whole world of people out there and for some of us smart technology is a lifeline that is transforming our lives and giving us new found independance and control. Sometimes it pays to think outside of your own privalidged circle.