Home Prototypes Older Americans using AI to save on summer travel, AARP study finds Prototypes Older Americans using AI to save on summer travel, AARP study finds By styloux - May 16, 2026 1 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp With fuel prices surging and budgets stretched, many Americans are rethinking their summer travel plans — but a new study from AARP suggests adults over 50 may have found a solution: artificial intelligence. RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR Prototypes Vatican sets up commission on artificial intelligence Prototypes Maker packs an opinionated, googly-eyed AI chatbot into a mobile suitcase, powered by an Nvidia Jetson — entirely local machine entity runs Gemma 4... Prototypes The Young Are Being Battered by AI as Hiring Shifts to Older Workers Prototypes An Experiment Put LLMs in Charge of Radio Stations. You’ll Never Guess How It Went Prototypes OpenAI seals deal in Malta to give all Maltese access to ChatGPT Plus Prototypes Talking to an AI avatar doctor before a real one shows real relief for cancer patients LEAVE A REPLY Cancel reply Please enter your comment! Please enter your name here You have entered an incorrect email address! Please enter your email address here Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. - Advertisement -APLICATIONS News Masters 2026: The best-dressed fans at the golf tournament styloux - April 10, 2026 0 You can't be too on-theme at the 2026 Masters. Attendees have been spotted wearing tournament-branded clothes, golf-themed accessories, and more. From jam to jewelry, these 5 Stanislaus County home businesses are... December 26, 2025 TechCrunch Mobility: The great Tesla rebranding February 1, 2026 Fashion advisor explains why buying this $4,000 luxury tote bag is... December 24, 2025 HOT NEWS News Fashion advisor explains why buying this $4,000 luxury tote bag is... Jewelry store employees fights armed robber | FOX 11 Los Angeles Foreign national sentenced in Connecticut for role in $4.4 million jewelry... DISTURBING NEW TREND: ‘Snatch and grab’ jewelry thefts on the rise