Helping Seniors Understand Artificial Intelligence
London & Online
I'm not selling anything.
Think of this as a public service for people like me.
Retired. Plenty of free time. A desire to help people.
One way I can help seniors is to explain about AI. It's in the news every day. The horror stories, the job losses, its hallucinations, its role in causing suicides. There are some grains of truth in those stories but there are also amazing ways it can help us be more connected to what is going on in the world. If you are part of a group - a church group, U3A, seniors or anything else - and you would like me to talk to your group, anywhere in London, contact me.
Free.
I am an 83-year-old writer, long-distance walker, former technology entrepreneur and daily user of artificial intelligence systems.
I have lived through almost the entire modern technological revolution.
Over the decades I have seen: punched cards; room-sized computers; cassette data storage; early word processors; dial-up internet; mobile phones; GPS; smartphones; cloud computing.
And now artificial intelligence.
Because of this, I understand both sides of the technology experience:
the excitement of innovation and the exhaustion that constant change can create.
I also understand something else: many older adults are far more capable of understanding modern technology than they believe.
Much of the difficulty comes not from lack of intelligence but from the way technology is explained. Too often it is presented in technical language by people who have never experienced what it feels like to encounter these ideas later in life.
My own background combines technology, business, writing and personal exploration.
One of my major writing projects examines the relationship between AI and mental health, including both the promise and the risks of increasingly human-like systems.
I am deeply interested not only in what AI can do, but in how it changes people: how they think, communicate, work, learn and relate to one another.
After the death of my wife Jackie in 2025, technology and writing became even more important parts of my daily structure and intellectual life. AI, in particular, became something I used not only for practical tasks but also for learning, reflection and creative exploration.
That experience shaped my belief that older adults should not be excluded from the AI era.
In many ways, this project is less about technology than about agency.
People should not feel pushed aside simply because the world has changed.
Curiosity, adaptability and creativity do not disappear with age.
London & Online
Please contact me by email.
I am happy to provide this service free of charge to groups: U3A, church groups, social groups etc and to individuals for a small fee to cover travel costs and so on.