All posts tagged: Retiring

The ‘Father of the Internet’ is finally retiring

The ‘Father of the Internet’ is finally retiring

Vinton Cerf will step down from his role as Google’s chief internet evangelist next week, marking the conclusion of one of the most influential careers in technology history. While speaking via video feed at the Open Frontier conference hosted by the Laude Institute, Cerf was recognized by Dave Patterson, the UC Berkeley professor best known for co-developing RISC processor architecture. “Vint … has been at Google more than 20 years, and he is retiring a week from today, and so I think we ought to give him a round of applause for a relatively good career,” Patterson said, to cheers from the room. Google did not respond to a request for comment by publication time. Cerf, 83, and collaborator Robert Kahn are credited as being the architects of the networking protocols that became the internet we know today. His work developing and popularizing TCP/IP — the basic set of rules that lets different computer networks talk to each other — beginning in the 1970s has been recognized with numerous honorary degrees, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, …

ESPN’s ‘SportsCenter’ stalwart Linda Cohn is retiring

ESPN’s ‘SportsCenter’ stalwart Linda Cohn is retiring

Linda Cohn, an ESPN veteran who has anchored more episodes of “SportsCenter” than anyone in history, announced her retirement Monday. A Los Angeles resident since 2018, Cohn, 66, will make her final ESPN appearance Friday. After starting her career in radio and local TV, Cohn joined ESPN’s “SportsCenter” in 1992 when female hosts on sports programming were still a rarity. In a statement, she acknowledged her trailblazer status. “What I’m most proud of is that my career lasted long enough for me to see little girls grow up watching ‘SportsCenter,’ enter this business, and succeed in it,” she said. “If my journey helped make that path a little easier for them, then that’s the achievement I’ll cherish most.” Cohn moved to Los Angeles in 2018. She regularly anchored the late-night edition of “SportsCenter,” which originated from the city until last year. She hit a milestone of anchoring 5,000 “SportsCenter” episodes in February 2016 and appeared on at least 650 more over the 10 years that followed. Cohn, who played collegiate hockey at Oswego State University …

Three Years After Retiring, I Finally Understand What Actually Makes Life Meaningful

Three Years After Retiring, I Finally Understand What Actually Makes Life Meaningful

True story: An elderly woman in a memory care facility met another resident at lunch. She, frustrated from severe hearing loss, found the man’s booming voice reassuring.  Lacking short-term memories, they jabbered in circles for hours, recounting tales of their youth. The staff called them “The Loopers” because they replayed the same stories day after day. They were gloriously happy. I’ve been retired for three years now, and each year I’ve written about my experiences, insights, and exploits (here is Year One and Year Two). Year Three, I’m pleased to announce, turned out to be the best year yet, packed with insights about life, happiness, and of course, sadness. Year One felt like a Geezers-Gone-Wild vacation, a funhouse of dazzling opportunities raging for my attention. I squeezed every activity and exploration into my days and flopped into bed every night, dead as a zombie. In Year Two, reality came to visit. I grudgingly acknowledged the limitations of finance, capabilities, responsibilities, and time. Life still glowed with a bright patina, but I took a breath and …

Bard President Botstein retiring after Jeffrey Epstein ties Revealed

Bard President Botstein retiring after Jeffrey Epstein ties Revealed

FILE PHOTO: President of Bard College Leon Botstein speaks during the “Changing Landscapes: From the Digital Classroom to the Global Campus” panal during the TIME Summit On Higher Education on Oct. 18, 2012 in New York City. Jemal Countess | Getty Images Bard College President Leon Botstein announced Friday that he will retire at the end of June after 51 years leading the prestigious New York liberal arts school, a day after a law firm retained by its Board of Trustees delivered a critical report about his relationship with the late notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. “Nothing that President Botstein did in connection with his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was illegal,” WilmerHale attorney Jamie Gorelick wrote in a summary to those trustees, which CNBC obtained. “But President Botstein made decisions in the course of that relationship that reflect on his leadership of Bard,” wrote Gorelick, who served as a deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration. Bard’s trustees retained WilmerHale in February to review its 79-year-old president’s relationship with Epstein after details about their communications …

‘I’ve been in a swimming pool zero times since retiring’

‘I’ve been in a swimming pool zero times since retiring’

Alistair Brownlee was the first athlete ever to defend the Olympic triathlete title. Over an 18-year career, he claimed gold at both the London 2012 and Rio 2016 Games, as well as 22 World Series events, two World Championships, a Commonwealth title and four European Championships, to name only a few. Two years into retirement, Brownlee shows little sign of slowing down. When he’s not working with his brother Jonny on the Brownlee Foundation – their charity encouraging young people into sport – he’s focused on his own business, Truefuels, which sells energy gels and electrolytes. It’s hard to reconcile all this with the unassuming man who strolls into our office alone on a Thursday in March. It’s not the first time the point has been made. In 2021, he told The Telegraph that he was once told that he’s “an inspiration because he looks so normal it makes everyone think that if he can do it, they could too”. I caught up with him for our Readers Ask series, where industry specialists answer questions …

Strictly’s Amy Dowden considered retiring after cancer treatment

Strictly’s Amy Dowden considered retiring after cancer treatment

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Strictly Come Dancing professional Amy Dowden has revealed she was on the brink of abandoning her dance career after undergoing treatment for breast cancer. The Welsh dancer, who has been a fixture on the BBC show since 2017, was diagnosed with the disease in 2023. Speaking on former Busted star Matt Willis’s podcast On The Mend, Dowden recounted the arduous journey of chemotherapy and two mastectomies, which forced her to step away from the show. She confessed that upon her return, she had “lost everything as a dancer, my flexibility, my speed – everything I worked 20 years for”. Dowden credited fellow professional Carlos Gu, who went on to win Strictly, for preventing her from giving up. “My body had been through everything so I knew I wasn’t who I was, and I was ready to hang up my dancing shoes …

Elite gymnasts are no longer retiring after pregnancy – sport science needs to catch up

Elite gymnasts are no longer retiring after pregnancy – sport science needs to catch up

When Olympian Alice Kinsella talks about returning to elite competition after giving birth, she isn’t simply planning a comeback; she’s pushing into territory that gymnastics has rarely explored. Increasingly, athletes are returning to training and competition after childbirth, often sooner, stronger and with greater public visibility. This challenges the long-held expectation that women must retire to have a family. Although this shift is now becoming well established in several sports, such as long-distance running and team sports, others remain constrained by narrow ideas about when peak performance should occur. Women’s artistic gymnastics sits at the sharp end of this debate. For much of the modern Olympic era, the sport became synonymous with “little pixies”: exceptionally young champions, lightweight bodies and careers that peaked early then ended quickly. Over the past 20 years, the age at which gymnasts reach peak performance has slowly risen from teenage years to early 20s, bringing elite success into overlap with the years many women plan to have children. When these timelines overlap, athletes may feel pressured to choose between motherhood …

ChatGPT Users Are Crashing Out Because OpenAI Is Retiring the Model That Says “I Love You”

ChatGPT Users Are Crashing Out Because OpenAI Is Retiring the Model That Says “I Love You”

In August 2025, OpenAI released its long-awaited GPT-5 AI model, calling it the “smartest, fastest, and most useful model yet.” But what really caught the attention of the company’s most diehard fans was the decision to retire all of its previous AI models, news that was met with a massive outcry among ChatGPT users who’d developed a strong attachment to the outgoing GPT-4o. The backlash was severe enough for CEO Sam Altman to back down in a matter of days, once again reinstating GPT-4o, which was much warmer and sycophantic than its successor. Five months later, OpenAI is finally getting ready to pull down the beloved AI model — after it’s been at the heart of several welfare lawsuits, including wrongful death allegations — for good on February 13, according to a January 29 update. “While this announcement applies to several older models, GPT‑4o deserves special context,” the company wrote at the time. “After we first [retired] it and later restored access during the GPT‑5 release, we learned more about how people actually use it day to …

Comic-Con Tips for the Shy and Retiring Nerd

Comic-Con Tips for the Shy and Retiring Nerd

With Emerald City Comic Con and the entire convention season approaching, now is a good time for me to share some of the lessons I learned during my first trip to New York Comic-Con (NYCC) last October. These are not the usual tips about checking schedules in advance and wearing comfortable shoes, which you definitely should do, for the record. No, these tips are aimed at your prototypically shy, perhaps socially awkward nerd. If you’re more comfortable in a quiet corner of the comic book shop but still want to brave a major con, read on! Tip #1: Be Prepared for Crowds I know you think you know this. I thought I knew this. I’ve been to Disney World. I can handle crowds. No problem. Friends, I was not prepared. The Stack Sign up to The Stack to receive Book Riot Comic’s best posts, picked for you. Subscribe to Selected No Thanks I spent a significant portion of my day shuffling along shoulder to shoulder in the midst of a veritable hoard of geeks. It …

Boomers Are So Fed Up With Gen Z That They’re Retiring Early

Boomers Are So Fed Up With Gen Z That They’re Retiring Early

Younger generations have been waiting for ages for boomers to retire and clear space on the career ladder, and it seems they might be getting their wish: A study finds that many boomers are retiring early just so they don’t have to work with Gen Z. It’s certainly no secret that boomers and Gen Zers don’t exactly see eye to eye, but it seems Gen Z’s reputation for being hard to work with has hit boomers particularly hard, underlining the two generations’ very different approaches to the workplace. Boomers are retiring early in order to avoid working with Gen Z, according to a survey. Gen Z has had a reputation problem from the moment they entered the workforce, just like millennials and Gen X before them. But the complaints about Gen Z seem to be particularly sticky. Even many millennial managers sympathetic to Gen Z’s grievances with the career world have admitted Gen Z really is hard to work with, citing their aversion to feedback, unrealistic expectations about schedule and pay, and need for office …