Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Older Adult Use of Technology

A new AGE-WELL poll conducted by Environics Research in July 2020 shows that two-thirds (65%) of Canadians aged 65 and older now own a smartphone, compared to 58% in 2019, and most who own one (83%) use it daily.

During the pandemic, seniors have increased their use of video calls to communicate with family and friends. About a quarter (23%) of Canadians 65+ now use video-calling on their smartphones, twice as many as in 2019; 6 in 10 of whom report increased use due to COVID-19.

When it comes to social media, so popular with a younger demographic, older adults are populating the platforms too. Over one-third (37%) say they use social media to communicate with family and friends (of whom 4 out of 10 reports utilizing it more as a mode of communication due to COVID-19). Compared to 2019, they are more present on YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook (which 68% now use, up from 63% in 2019).

And with many seniors staying at home more during COVID-19, two in 10 (19%) of Canadians 65+ are using online shopping for essential items, like groceries, for “health, wellness and/or independence” (of whom 6 in 10 reports utilizing it more due to COVID-19).

The survey results show that 72% of Canadians aged 65 and over feel confident using current technology. How about you? Confident?

If you are a Baby Boomer, when you view the statistics, there is no surprise, we know we are not technophobic. Most of us are unfazed by technology, and they are using a lot of it during these challenging times,” I am seeing many of my friends and other older adults using more technology, and COVID-19 was clearly a catalyst that is taking tech use to a new level.

Thursday, September 15, 2016

What can your cell phone do for you?

I give a workshop on Technology and seniors that focuses on health care technologies, and I realized that the smart phone can also be used as a technology to help us monitor ourselves and to have fun. If anything on this list catches your eye, check them out by clicking on the link or by just typing the name of the function in Google search, preceded by the word smartphone. You will find plenty of apps for both Android and Iphones listed. 

Some of these features require you to turn on that function. Again, the Internet is your friend. Search for what you want to do by typing in the function   followed by your phone model, like direct call samsung galaxy S6.


Manage your thermostat and control your home's lights

Monitor your heart rate

Speak a text, have it translated into words and sent.

Have an e-mail or text read to you.

Identify images

Measure speed, height, or distance of something

Find out why your check engine light is on

Turn your Android into a games console

Identify song titles 

Visual voicemail

Mail a postcard 

Block spam phone calls

Use camera as a magnifying glass

Snap a picture with the volume button

Use as a universal remote

Create a Wi-Fi hotspot

Barcode and QR code reader

Correct for color blindness

Use Data saver setting  (Android) 

Use Data saver settings (Iphone)

Quick launch the camera

Download large files

Create a personal sound meter 

Take a screenshot.

Digitize documents. ­

Direct call (put the phone to your ear and it dials the contact on the screen)

Split screen (2 windows open at once...sometimes called multi-tasking)

Leveler & compass (Iphone)

Leveler and Compass (Android)

Metal Detector for finding dropped screws

Distance finder

Flashlight (these listed to not require access to personal information)

Send a mobile fax (this will cost as  there is a fee for sending faxes)

Connect to a computer and use phone as an external hard drive

Transfer files wirelessly from phone to computer

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Facebook facelift faces tough fight


The following was posted by  Priyanka Joshi / Mumbai on Sep 26, 2011

Last week, 29-year-old K Dasaratha Rao, a website developer and software consultant from Bangalore, saw several new features being added to the social networking site Facebook

 “Honestly, I didn’t take to the changes immediately. But as I spent time on the site and saw what Facebook had done, I realised that it had actually simplified the number of clicks I would make on the home page.”

What made sense for Rao is that the new FB interface automatically grouped his over 450 friends in convenient lists, made it easier for him to see the popular FB updates by close friends as top stories and even added a button that allowed him to subscribe to international web developers, who do not know him but can share insights on technology.

But Rao’s enthusiasm seems to be an exception when you hear avid Facebook users like New Delhi-based beauty and wellness consultant Ritika Sharma, 27. “What was wrong with the old Facebook that it is now being constantly redesigned. The new features make my FB page too complicated,” she says.

Her colleague, Bhawna Misao, a receptionist, too had similar views. “Since online Facebook has changed so much, I have started using the Facebook app on my BlackBerry, which is still a reflection of the old interface.”

 New features on FB have also failed to impress 20-year-old Miranda House student, Rachna Punjabi who sys: “Recent features like Facebook’s real-time “ticker” stream that alerts me about what my friends read, watch and listen to or tag, is dizzying real time and way too much social sharing.” This also prompted Punjabi to tweak her FB settings that allowed limited sharing of what she does on the social networking portal.

With nearly 36 million users from India (according to September statistics from Socialbakers), Facebook was accessed by more than 45 per cent of India’s internet users. Mark Zuckerberg, CEO and founder of Facebook, should be closely listening to Indian users because the site witnessed a heady growth of about 27 per cent in the last three months, adding over seven milion users.

And FB is not done with the changes yet. At last week’s f8, Facebook’s annual developers conference in San Francisco, Zuckerberg announced the company’s intent to overhaul the profile page on FB for a new feature called Timeline and revealed plans to encourage people to use Facebook as a media-consumption platform.

Sam Lessin, a product manager at Facebook wrote in an official blog: “The way your profile works today, 99 per cent of the stories you share vanish. The only way to find the posts that matter is to click ‘Older Posts’ at the bottom of the page. Again. And again.” With Timeline, FB will curate a home for all stories users share, will be wider than the existing profile, and a lot more visual.

Part of FB’s hurry to evolve as the social network for the masses across the globe is partly due to the heat it is facing from the three-month-old social network site, Google Plus. The new kid on the block from Google’s stable aims to take some of Facebook’s shine off with its own set of social features and forthcoming integration with the search giant’s various online products expected to be launched.

For now, however, it looks like Facebook still enjoys the users’ confidence. According to Informate Mobile Intelligence, Facebook has outpaced Google Plus in terms of share of page views. While share of page views for Google.com declined by 36 per cent over the last six months, the share of Facebook.com saw an increase of 68 per cent.

Users, like Vinit Udeshi, a music jockey in Kolkata, hailed Facebook for launching a standalone messaging and chat app for iPhone and Android devices. “This app allows you to send text messages to anyone in your phone’s contact list as well as your Facebook friends. You can see the messages from the Messenger app as well as your web-based version of Facebook.” The site has also introduced a free 90-day access on mobile devices as part of its tie-ups with telecom operators, including Reliance, Aircel and Airtel in India.

Today, Facebook India is hoarded with over 17 million users in the age group of 18-24 years, followed by the users in the age of 25-34, reveals Socialbakers’ data. Now, Google Plus too is targeting the same user group.

WHAT’S NEW 0N FACEBOOK
The site has overhauled its page design. The new “Top Stories” feature shows a mix of the most popular news stories, according to Facebook’s algorithm, along with the most current status updates. The news feed is meant to act like a user’s social newspaper.

With images being an integral part of most social-networking activity, Facebook will soon roll out “Timeline” that will be best described as a visual representation of your entire life as shared on Facebook. Timeline will allow users to scroll through maps of where you’ve been, pictures, comments, apps, activities shared and so on. Facebook intends to allow users to curate “the story of who you are,” highlighting important photos, events, apps and more

News apps like Digg, Guardian, Yahoo, Wetpaint and The Economist, among others will be available

There will be several music, radio and video-sharing applications on facebook but whether users can stream in India remains to be seen

Friend Lists were revamped making it easier to segment people in lists and a new Smart Lists feature that automatically categorises connections based on common interests, locations and place of work

Facebook has also started grouping status updates about similar topics

For users who have been using the site for a while, it will now show your old status updates from the same day as you browse photo albums

Social media experts like Hareesh Tibrewala, joint CEO, Social Wavelength, says: “Google Plus is still too much in the nascent stage but Google has the power of its search and email. It should be able to grow about 50 per cent or so in the next 12 months.” Google Plus already has over three million users from India although it’s not exactly a happy user base.


WHAT’S NEW 0N GOOGLE PLUS
Hangouts On Air is a feature that lets users broadcast and record their sessions. When a user is “on air,” up to nine others can join the Hangout session and anyone (even those not in the user’s network) can tune in to the live broadcast. To encourage additional information-sharing via Hangouts, Google has added screen-sharing, sketchpad for group doodlingand the ability to create Google Docs from Hangouts. These features can be accessed by clicking the “Try Hangouts with extras” button on your Google Plus page

Google Plus on Android devices will support Hangout video-chats. For starters, users must have a front-facing camera that has Android 2.3 Gingerbread or a higher version

 Google will allow app developers to build applications on the new Hangouts platform


Google Plus mobile app includes better SMS support, allowing users in the US and India to post messages on Google Plus, receive notifications and respond to group messages. Indian users need to get their phone numbers verified on Google Plus and then can send texts to 9222222222 to share information on the move

 A direct challenge to Facebook’s game ecosystem, Google Plus launched its own game apps

Users who use Google Books canshare their books on Google Plus, adding a social experience into the Google Books project

Saurabh Rathore, partner at Moe’s Art, says: “Google Plus interface is boring and Facebook is trying to get more and more complicated. Twitter seems to be the best bet for me. It’s a place where I can control whom I want to follow.”

However, he quickly adds that Facebook still gets a higher rating than Google Plus “because it’s an older platform hence more friends and more conversations. Plus has graveyard-at-midnight kind of silence. When I am happy, I’m on Facebook, when I have to rant, I go to Twitter. Google Plus is my fifth option, after Linkedin and Foursquare.”

Google is listening. Its social search is now integrating Google Plus posts into its search engine results pages for those who log in to their Google account for a personalised search experience. “That means content that your Google Plus contacts have shared will enhance your search experience,” says Adhvith Dhuddu of Alive Now, a social media management firm.

The biggest improvement to Google Plus is via Hangouts - the popular group web conferencing application that lets up to 10 users share a browser-based video chat session. Hangouts On Air is a hangout that lets users broadcast and record their session. When a user is “on air”, up to nine other people can join the Hangout, though anyone can tune in to the live broadcast.

The move may pique interest among Android device users, estimated to be 10 per cent of India’s mobile handset base. Vic Gunhotra, senior vice president of engineering, Google wrote in his blog: “Hangouts currently supports Android 2.3+ devices with front-facing cameras (and iOS support is coming soon). The new mobile app is rolling out to Android Market today [20 September], so you can start hanging out at any time, from just about anywhere.”

Social media expert Rajiv Dingra, founder and CEO of social media agency WatBlog, says: “I don’t believe Google Plus was meant to be a Facebook challenger as much as it was meant to be a more controlled forum for highly-focused content. The design of Plus favours interaction within groups and is not about posting trivial comments.”

His sentiments are echoed by 32-year-old Jayaraman, a chemical engineer based in UAE. “I think Google Plus made itself better after the latest improvements. Facebook has nearly ruined its news feed. I now spend a few minutes every day unmarking updates as “top stories”. I do not want to see “top stories” when I go to my Facebook news feed, especially when Facebook has no idea what I think is important or interesting.”

It is perhaps worth pointing out that Google co-founder and CEO Larry Page himself hasn’t made any public postings on his Google Plus page in more than a month.