This week's best things Failure stories, FOH & education teams, the National Theatre, a million homepages, AI optimism, museum toolkits, Wikimedia crawlers, knitting, the immersive industry, gov collabs, and a strange Nintendo site.
This week's best things Tone of voice, Google and the future of search, Digg returns, a fish doorbell, designing better error messages, Duolingo's product principles, Albania shuts down TikTok for a year, can ChatGPT replace a curator, a load of vacancies, salt sculptures, and Sweden's Eurovision entry.
This week's best things A wall of sound, a spectacular website celebrating Andrei Sakharov, the importance of word choices, Kotter's dual operating system, Swedish perspectives on AI in exhibitions, an AI playbook for charities, Fyre Festival 2, a final essay from SGS and Owais Lightwala, a survey on digital failure.
This week's best things Advice for content teams on website redesigns, how to fix social media, inattention, hopeful technologists, understanding ease, BBC research on AI inaccuracies, a new digital museum, an experimentation framework, innovation at TodayTix, and a Bruce Springsteen cover.
This week's best things New things from the Rijksmuseum, a heuristic framework for content, more on the limitations of genAI, a Japanese farmer creating techno bangers, a call for leaders to explore different ways of thinking and working, a look at the impact of 2024's tech trends, and an interesting Radiohead cover.
This week's best things Google Maps begins its death spiral, AI search could break the web, analysing the UX of Trello, defeating the Spotify algorithm, generational differences in communication preferences, chasing a Waymo taxi around San Francisco, the Jaguar rebrand, and music with buckets.
This week's best things The NT on business models, synthetic media, scrolling increases boredom, why people quit, knowledge maps, AI photo editing, and amazing drawings.
Getting over 'the fold' and understanding how people read A look at how people read in screen-based/scrolling enviroments
The outsized potential of Content Thinking A few thoughts on the benefits of working with content experts