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by zer00eyz 3378 days ago
I spent part of my youth working with special needs kids.

Everyone is different, and you never know what is going to work.

First lets talk about what is truly positive in what your doing, you have a goal: "lessen the load for my mother".

The reality is that your mom isn't going to be there forever, and giving your brother a life that is his own matters.

That opens up my next questions:

Do the things your proposing solve the underlying issues or do they simply shift the burden? Do you want to have to maintain these API's forever? What happens if amazon stops offering alexa? What happens if your brother transitions into an environment where he can not take advantage of the technologies your building? What happens if the power goes out for a few days (it can happen)?

I would suggest that you spend your efforts finding a good occupational therapist first. I suspect that this is going to be like looking for a needle in a haystack and in the short term would make a lot of other solutions seem more practical. Your looking for a person who is good at what they do and gets along with your brother, depending on where you live this could be HARD.

It might take a long time to get your brother to the next level when it comes to his functioning. It might cost you quite a bit out of pocket in the (relative) near term. However if your brother lives to be 50 or older these costs will turn out to be rather small in the long run. Your freeing your mother, and eventually yourself, from burdens (I don't mean that in a callous way but a loving one) and giving your brother more independence and flexibility.

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With all of that out there, I don't want to dissuade you from building any of the things you suggest. People with special needs need every advantage they can get, hell some of the things your suggesting would be of benefit to regular folks as well. A "Weight sensor API for bed" not only helps your brother but every parent with a lazy teenager!

Realize that there are probably others who want, need or are willing to support you in building these these tools for people with special needs and/or disabilities. If your going to be open (source not minded) then you might be surprised at how much support you get. Prosthetics 3d printing is probably the most prominent and impactful example I can think of that uses this model, and there is plenty of room and support for others.

As a final bit of encouragement, you need to go dig in at hackaday.com one of their 2017 prizes is for assistive technology!

https://hackaday.io/prize/details

1 comments

He currently lives with my mother and that has been the biggest hurdle with having him move out. Finding someone who can check up on him like a care giver.

He is high functional and can take of himself. He just has a hard time picking up social cues and takes a little longer to process things. He just needs a little help when it comes to motivation. It's interesting because he doesn't see himself as disabled or being autistic. He does love scifi movies which is why I think this chatbot could be like his personal Jarvis.

I'll have to check out the Hackaday, this voice chatbot is more of solving a personal problem than a startup idea but open sourcing this could be really great. Thanks for the suggestion.

I wish you luck in this endeavor! I'll keep an eye out for your project on hack a day!