First, about the phone, I know my niece told me that her phone knows her schedule and has begun texting comments about what she'll be doing that day. Told her she must be heading out to the gym, and she was.
Secondly, about Google AI, I was shocked by a sudden downturn in my elderly dbpdh's mental state one day and I typed in what had happened to Google AI.
I told AI my husband would once in a while get facts confused, but I couldn't believe what had just happened because he accused me of stealing two of his stepfather's rings out of the chest of drawers, and taking $500 out of his formerly secret wallet he used for his secret girlfriend until I found both.
I thought he was joking at first. After he said write him a check, I spilled my sugar-free 7-up when the horror of him being serious dawned on me.
AI said some helpful things about staying calm and distract by remembering something that needed to be done, time to cook something or even say I was going to the restroom.
In fact, I had left a room he followed me to when he was mad about something else, and when I closed the bathroom door, he left me alone when earlier he was yelling at me an inch from my face for the 2nd time recently. I've just discovered my laptop can record conversations and I've tested it to check background noise, and it is drowned out, and he was talking normally. AI said no beeping sounds come from the process and that appears to be true, but as Pook said, don't count on the information being what I need to know.
AI said my h's brain is broken and I'm not to use grey-rock or to be negative. Several websites like Mayo Clinic caregivers' support were listed for help with this. I was also told to discuss this with our doctor, write a letter or take one with me and give secretly at check-in.
So my experience was good with AI, but I'd be cautious about any suggestions. So far, it is what I'd do anyway, but I got there faster with the "conversation."


