Genius; she wants people to live through computer[s]. That use cutting-edge tech. [No pun intended].
What sets her a apart? Her humanistic approach. She says the people side is always the hardest. Technology has allowed blind programmers to take advantage of patients and their caregivers [by] us[ing] mobile sensing apps.
Who want[s ]to age? The burden of aging, increasingly falling; patients grown up with technology. To male things better artificial intelligence, a tablet that gives personalized advice on everything from anxiety to partnership.
Patients with mild dementia ask, "What are the fundamental human needs here? How does human behavior come into this situation?" [asks an old women lying on her bed anxious of letting technology run her life].
[The human robot responds, "Only when you combine the answer[s] you end up creating powerful improve[ments] that people can take of[f] their own health."
[The robot stands there waiting for the confirmation from the old lady.
The lady asks, "What if I'm ready to die, like now, what will happen?"
The robot, unclear, says, "Only humans will die, the lifeforce behind the machine will slowly die, choosing to be part of technology will keep you alive. Technology will live on with in your dead body".]
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'The Body of technology by: Elizabeth Mynatt ', Page 24, #3, from: National Geographic-Earth magazine
Song by: The Chainsmokers 'Sick Boy'
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