I didn’t suffer in my vegetarian Thanksgiving dinner

When I became a vegetarian 57 years ago, at the age of 20, that was cause for concern among friends and family who thought I was depriving myself of an essential food group: meat and fish. That didn't make sense then. It makes even less sense now, given how many more options vegetarians have when shopping in a grocery store or going out to eat at a restaurant. We're still a decided minority, about 6%, with about an additional 4% embracing a vegan diet. For Thanksgiving yesterday, I dug my last remaining Trader Joes Turkey-Less Stuffed Roast out of the…

My take on why old guys like me are so set in our ways

I'm now the person that I was always afraid of becoming. An old guy (I'm 77) who is really reluctant to deviate from his accustomed lifestyle. I'm not exactly the proverbial senior citizen sitting on his porch who screams at playful neighborhood children, "Keep your damn ball out of my front yard!" But I can understand why that dude would say that. Because the older I get -- and so far I haven't found any way to stop that inexorable trend -- the more I cling to habits in an almost obsessive fashion. The reason I do this, so far…

Over-hyped A.I. data centers are just one reason to beware of an A.I. investment bubble

I enjoy using A.I., artificial intelligence. The A.I. overview that pops up at the top of most of my Google searches seems pleasingly accurate. So is the A.I. summary of the reviews of an Amazon product that I'm considering purchasing. And I've played around with asking ChatGPT questions, and making amusing images with Grok Imagine. But a fascinating article in The New Yorker by Stephen Witt, "Inside the Data Centers that Train A.I. and Drain the Electrical Grid," clued me in to some scary facts that illustrate the danger of believing that A.I. is going to be an economic gold…

At my advanced age, it’s tough to decide if I should get a 3-year subscription to a magazine

Hate to break this news to you younger folks, but things get more difficult once you're a senior citizen like me. I know, you're familiar with stories of hearing difficulties, driving at night. opening jars with twist tops, and remembering where you put your damn reading glasses. There's lesser known troubles, though. Here's one that I encountered today. Two facts collided. One was that I turned 77 last month. The other was that I needed to renew my subscription to New Scientist magazine, a weekly published in Great Britain that I like a lot. Usually I renew for another year.…

Base-running blunder cost Toronto a World Series championship — by just a few inches

I love to watch sporting events because they so often -- heck, maybe always -- reflect life as a whole. Meaning, victory or defeat often doesn't go to the better team, or the most deserving team, but the luckiest team. That's true of life in general. We like to believe that successful people earned their way to the top of the Success Pyramid through hard work, talent, and perseverance. Actually, though, being in the right place at the right time and benefiting from chance events that ended up being the difference between success and failure often is a better explanation.…