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SPC at MWC: when technology learns to care

SPC at MWC: when technology learns to care

Every year, the Mobile World Congress brings together in Barcelona the companies that are shaping the future of technology.

But the future is not always recognized by what is spectacular. Sometimes it is recognized by what is necessary.

This year, SPC arrives at MWC with more than just a new solution. It comes with the realization of an evolution that had been developing for some time. A different way of understanding care, technological integration, and the role a European company can play in facing today’s major challenges.

From a reactive model to a more human way of caring

Europe is aging. We live longer, and that is good news. But we also live longer with chronic illnesses, strained healthcare systems, and families that cannot always be physically close.

For too long, home care has been reactive. Waiting for something to happen. A fall. A call. An emergency.

Even surrounded by devices and apps, many solutions have worked in isolation. Without integration, there is no context. And without context, it is impossible to anticipate. When we talk about older adults who want to keep living independently at home, anticipating is not just a technological improvement. It is a deeply human need.

ZEUS HALO: the smart core of the connected home

In this context, we present at MWC ZEUS HALO, an intelligent telecare platform designed to transform the traditional care model.

ZEUS HALO acts as the digital core of the connected home.

  • It learns routines, habits, and behavior patterns.
  • It detects significant deviations before they become emergencies.
  • It generates preventive alerts for family members, caregivers, or professional platforms.

But beyond the technology, what changes is the experience.

When a system can interpret context, intervention can arrive sooner. Uncertainty decreases. Peace of mind increases.

Artificial intelligence here does not replace anyone. It does not substitute a child’s call or a professional’s watchful eye. It amplifies the ability to care. Moreover, ZEUS HALO not only prevents. It also accompanies, can suggest activities, facilitate video calls, or encourage social connections.

Because loneliness is also a risk, and emotional well-being is part of health.

We don’t want technology that watches. We want technology that is present without intruding.

A step consistent with our evolution

The presentation of ZEUS HALO at MWC is not an isolated move. It is the most visible expression of the evolution SPC is undergoing.

For nearly four decades, we have designed devices for people and businesses. In recent years, we have focused especially on technology for older adults, not as just another category, but as a responsibility.

This experience has led us to understand that the future is not in adding devices, but in integrating them. In connecting data, systems, and people under a single vision.

SPC remains a manufacturer. But today it is also a strategic technology consultancy. It designs complete solutions, integrates systems, and supports organizations and institutions in transformation processes where the product is only part of the whole.

ZEUS HALO exemplifies this new stage.

| human by design, also at MWC

Being at MWC means being part of the global conversation about the future of technology. For SPC, that future is not measured only by speed or processing power. It is measured by real impact.

| human by design means that every technological advance must answer a simple question: does it really improve someone’s life?

In the case of ZEUS HALO, the answer translates into greater autonomy for older adults, greater peace of mind for families, and more sustainable care models for healthcare systems that need to evolve.

When technology is designed with purpose, it not only works better. It also cares better.

And that is what we wanted to share at the Mobile World Congress.

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