AI for Seniors
Friendly, no-jargon guides to AI tools for retirees and older adults — written without assumptions.
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Do You Need to Pay for AI? A Plain-English Guide to Free, Paid, and Tokens
Almost nobody needs to pay for AI. Here's exactly what's free, what the $20/mo plans actually unlock, what tokens are and when they show up on a bill, and the honest decision framework for when paying is worth it.
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How AI Helps You Pick the Right Medicare Plan for Your Meds and Your Doctors
Choosing a Medicare plan is overwhelming because the right plan depends on your specific medications, doctors, and how often you see them. Here's how to use ChatGPT or Claude to compare plans for your exact situation in plain English — and the limits to know.
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How to Use AI to Write the Medical Bill Appeal Letter That Actually Works
Most medical bills contain errors. Most people don't appeal because writing the letter feels insurmountable. AI removes that bottleneck — here are the prompts that draft a winning appeal in 10 minutes, plus the four moves to make before you mail it.
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How to Use AI to Read Any Insurance Policy's Fine Print Before You Sign
Insurance policies are 30–80 pages of deliberately dense legal language. Almost nobody reads them. That's where the gaps live. Here's how to use ChatGPT or Claude to spot exclusions, hidden gaps, and dangerous wording in 10 minutes — for car, home, health, life, or umbrella policies.
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How to Use AI to Decode Confusing Letters and Documents
Insurance letters, medical bills, legal forms — paste them into ChatGPT or Claude and get a plain-English explanation in seconds. A practical, no-jargon guide for anyone tired of decoding bureaucratic English.
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ChatGPT vs Claude vs Gemini: An Honest 2026 Comparison for Real People
All three are excellent free AI chatbots in 2026. Here's where each one wins, where each one loses, and how to actually pick — without the hype, without the hot takes.
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Why AI Sometimes Makes Things Up (and How to Spot It)
AI confidently invents facts a few times a day — names, dates, citations, numbers. It's called hallucination, and it's the #1 risk to using AI well. Here's why it happens, when it matters most, and the 30-second sanity check that protects you.