Something to help your elderly parents with their television

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around challenges faced by elderly individuals in using television remote controls, particularly in the context of cognitive decline associated with aging. Participants share personal experiences, propose solutions, and explore various remote control technologies.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant describes modifying remote controls by shaving off unnecessary buttons to simplify usage for elderly parents, suggesting that many remotes are overly complicated.
  • Another participant mentions the Xfinity remote's voice recognition feature as a potential aid for elderly users, although it is unclear if it can control TVs.
  • There are discussions about the functionality of the Xfinity remote, including its ability to control cable boxes and TVs through specific codes.
  • Some participants humorously comment on the tendency of remotes to go missing, attributing it to their children or joking about the remotes having a life of their own.
  • Concerns are raised about the design of remotes being unnecessarily complicated, with one participant suggesting that they may be designed for marketing rather than user-friendliness.
  • A participant draws a parallel between remotes and phones, suggesting that both can be overly complex and that there is a market for simplified devices aimed at seniors.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a general agreement on the complexity of remote controls and their challenges for elderly users. However, there are differing opinions on the effectiveness of various solutions, such as voice recognition technology and physical modifications to remotes.

Contextual Notes

Some participants mention specific technologies and brands, but there is no consensus on the best approach to simplify remote controls for elderly users. The discussion includes personal anecdotes and humorous observations, which may not reflect broader trends or solutions.

Whipley Snidelash
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My elderly parents, before they passed, would call me into the room almost every night to unbork their television because of the remote control. It seems every single remote control, and if you’re like me you have a pile of them, has the exact same problem that baffles the elderly who are developing cognitive problems due to dementia, Alzheimer’s or just old age. Every remote control has buttons that will call up a menu and every single one, I have anyway, needs a different button to get rid of at least some of them. So I came up with a solution.

Virtually all of them have soft buttons now and the unsophisticated only need power, volume and channel. I took a razor blade and shaved all the rest off flush, no more problems and you can still use the shaved buttons if necessary.

not even going to get into the stupidity of our species that they can’t figure this out and I would bet that almost every remote has this problem.
 
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My Xfinity remote has voice recognition now, and it seems to work pretty well. Also, I don't know if they have the capability to control TVs yet, but my wife uses "Alexa" a lot to do things and manage lists, etc. It looks like it can interface via WiFi with lots of Smart Home devices...

https://alexyanything.com/
 
I just got XFinity, no remote or equipment, bought the modem separate. What does your Xfinity remote control?
 
Whipley Snidelash said:
Virtually all of them have soft buttons now and the unsophisticated only need power, volume and channel. I took a razor blade and shaved all the rest off flush, no more problems and you can still use the shaved buttons if necessary.
Variation of the same thing; I've seen examples where people wrapped electrical tape or otherwise covered their parents'/grandparents' remotes, with cutouts for the only buttons they really needed. Simplifying is definitely useful.
 
Whipley Snidelash said:
I just got XFinity, no remote or equipment, bought the modem separate. What does your Xfinity remote control?
Just the cable box and TV so far. You enter a code for the brand/model of the TV so it knows what IR encoding to use for stuff like volume, brightness, etc. The button in the lower middle with the microphone symbol on it is what you push to talk into it:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B079J63554/?tag=pfamazon01-20

1600368991156.png
 
My problem is that with 5 kids the remote somehow often wanders into a different room. Nobody ever takes it out of the room. So ours must be alive, growing legs as needed, and then undergoing atrophy before the legs can be directly observed.
 
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I don't have a remote for my TV. I guess that's because I don't have a TV.
 
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George Jones said:
I don't have a remote for my TV. I guess that's because I don't have a TV.
Oh, you're one of those show-off power users who streams everything to their iPhone I guess...
 
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berkeman said:
Oh, you're one of those show-off power users who streams everything to their iPhone I guess...

Nope. :smile: I don't have a cell phone. I tell my classes "If i had a cell phone, my partner could get a hold of me."
 
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  • #11
George Jones said:
I don't have a remote for my TV. I guess that's because I don't have a TV.
That's probably a good thing - in 2020.
 
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So you bought just the remote? Just for the voice control feature? How does it relate to XFinity? Trying to determine if I want one.
 
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Whipley Snidelash said:
So you bought just the remote? Just for the voice control feature? How does it relate to XFinity? Trying to determine if I want one.
No, it came with the system. We used to use AT&T DSL when we lived in an apartment downtown, but two years ago we moved into the hills east of San Jose, and DSL couldn't reach us anymore. So we swtiched to Xfinity cable service for TV and Internet, and they installed their modem (WiFi and wired Ethernet) and we got two TV control boxes with remotes as part of the package.
 
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Whipley Snidelash said:
has the exact same problem that baffles the elderly who are developing cognitive problems due to dementia, Alzheimer’s or just old age.
Just the elderly.
I think most remotes are someone's way of having some fun at the expense of the user, just a marketing gimmic, or an last minute design of putting parts in a box, shake them up and out comes a stupid remote with buttons that do no make any sense.

There must a Dibert cartoon about this.
 
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  • #16
256bits said:
I think most remotes are someone's way of having some fun at the expense of the user...
Phones are just the same, I think. No wonder that 'senior phone' is now a category on its own right.

Ps.: oh, wait. So when I put a gimmic-free custom rom to my phone then I'm actually turning it into a kind of 'senior phone' :doh:
 
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