Panasonic R&D 'House of the Future' To Open 64
Tomo Hiratsuka writes "On January 4 Panasonic opens its new R&D showcase in Tokyo, featuring the usual raft of environmentally friendly products and a take on how to make gadgets more usable for the graying societies of the future. Examples are thin on the ground at the minute but the company's Universal Design (UD) concept could be just the kind of simplification everybody's grandparents have been whining for over the holidays when faced with the space-age remotes on new-fangled DVD players and the like." Details can be found via CBS, and an official release.
Re:but does it run windows? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:but does it run windows? (Score:2)
Re:but does it run windows? (Score:1)
Re:but does it run windows? (Score:2)
Stupid drivers...
seriously (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:seriously (Score:5, Funny)
Re:seriously (Score:2)
Re:seriously (Score:1)
Re:seriously (Score:2)
My dad once consulted for a client who wanted to bring such a system to market in the early 80s. They just had all their priorities so wrong. Kind of like a cross between an Asimov "boy and his robot dog" story and "Better Homes and Gardens" magazine. Crap like rotating, talking clothes hangers in wardrobes, and automated robotic laundry system
Instead of baby-proofing the house.. (Score:2)
The House is designed to accommodate diversity in age and abilities. The corridors are wide enough to allow wheelchair access and handrails are installed to aid walking and prevent accidents. Furniture and fixtures in the House have rounded edges and are set at a height the users can access comfortably from sitting in a chair.
Re:Instead of baby-proofing the house.. (Score:2)
Re:Instead of baby-proofing the house.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Aged care is enormously expensive, especially in Japan. You can save a lot of money with better automation.
I remember a researcher who was building automated systems to help elderly people. The user interface was a major problem until he hit on the idea of reusing the telephone. When the house systems need to tell the occupants comething (time to take your medication?) the phone rings and a voice delivers the information.
Re:Instead of baby-proofing the house.. (Score:1)
"Hello, I am your pusher robot. I am here to protect you from the terrible secret of space. Please go to the top of the stairs"
Re:Instead of baby-proofing the house.. (Score:1)
*(not to be confused with Crow T. Robot.)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
In Other News... (Score:2)
So where in this house is the IT expert going to stay?
Universal Design? (Score:2)
OTOH, it could just end up being an overpriced, dysfunctional way of just making things even more complicated.
We'll have to see...
GPX2 - Linux hand-held device... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Sounds like a potentially cute device.. already runs linux, the developers have a wiki, they embrace open source and tinkering.. hmm(!)
Hover Cars (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hover Cars (Score:2)
Disturbing (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Disturbing (Score:2)
A lot of Japanese firms do this (Score:3, Interesting)
They also had the outragous concept cars and transport devices such as the i-unit [toyota.co.jp].
It's all been doooone.... before. (Score:1)
It seems like every few years, some tech company does a "home of the future." AOL's version was the "Home of the 21st Century" http://www.h21c.seas.gwu.edu/ [gwu.edu] done in conjunction with The George Washington University http://www.gwu.edu/ [gwu.edu] at the Virginia Campus. The technologies on display are always either *very* nice and high-end, or kludged together from off-the-shelf stuff. I'll be interested to see what the cool-factor on this is, though.
Re:It's all been doooone.... before. (Score:2)
Cue Raymond Scott's "Powerhouse"...
Re:It's all been doooone.... before. (Score:1)
Freaking Sweet (Score:1)
we'll do your homework every night
it's really hard
that's why we got that stephen hawking
my god this house is freaking sweet
Family Guy [lyricallegend.co.uk]
Samsung's reaction (Score:1, Funny)
As the race to future tightens, there has been rumours about Samsung R&D on next generation wives cloned from female college students, but this far prototypes haven't succeed [bbc.co.uk]...
Re:Samsung's reaction (Score:2)
Also of interest: Japan's humanoid robots (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Also of interest: Japan's humanoid robots (Score:2)
Your post is reasonable but it carries a message that has poped up on /.
Re:Also of interest: Japan's humanoid robots (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:AHA! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:AHA! (Score:2)
Someday (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Someday (Score:1)
Technology: further isolating old people? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm torn between these two arguments. It's not like everyone treated old people warmly and integrated them into normal social life and then technology came along and messed it all up.
Finally, I'm dubious about how 'eco' all of these clean redesigns are. Visiting California, I'm always amused to hear about people with their new 'eco-mega-mansions' - big houses built really far from anywhere, at great expense, with lots of 'energy saving' features. They may save energy in the steady state - but the massive expenditure of energy and capital required to build them is significant. In a part of the world that isn't really experiencing much population growth, gadget-packed new developments (almost guaranteed to be obsolete and difficult in 10 or 20 years) probably aren't a very eco-friendly way to go (even if their theoretical characteristics in the 'steady state' look good).
You know what I would be happy just with? (Score:2)
And while we are at it, is it that hard to label the peripheral that goes to said wall-w
Re:You know what I would be happy just with? (Score:2)
I don't seem to have any problem using a Sharpie and a strip of masking tape.
-h-
Re:You know what I would be happy just with? (Score:1)
Yeah, yeah, yeah (Score:2)
If you built the house of the future today with a high thermal mass material l
Smiles all around (Score:2)
Ticky-Tacky (Score:2)
1. Little boxes on the hillside,
Little boxes made of ticky-tacky,
Little boxes, little boxes,
Little boxes, all the same.
There's a green one and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one
And they're all made out of ticky-tacky
And they all look just the same.
2. And the people in the houses
All go to the university,
And they all get put in boxes,
Little boxes, all the same.
And there's doctors and there's lawyers
And business executives,
And they're all made out of ticky-tacky
And they all look just the
And the little boxes are still there. (Score:2)
Re:And the little boxes are still there. (Score:2)
Houses of the future (Score:2, Insightful)
A story about products adapted to older people (Score:2)
The only real improvement for older people was that it had less functionnality and had bigger buttons.
Somehow I wasn't ready to pay twice as much for bigger buttons.
My feeling is that the company doing it was way too greedy and treats older people as 'cash cow', barf.
I'll believe it when I see it... (Score:1)
I'll believe it when I see it. After watching the development of PCs, VCRs, etc. etc. etc. over the past twenty years I've come to the conclusion that tech companies are *incapable* of developing technology that's grandma-friendly. They fail to do granny-testing, and when grannies complain that they can't work X,Y,Z manufacturers blame the end-users. Not their products.