This week's best things How to broaden arts audiences, rethinking the Dutch supermarket experience, the fallout from the Taylor Swift deepfake debacle, immersive thoughts and highlights, the early days of gaming and some...unusual web design.
This week's best things Icelandic horses, the fallout from the cyber attack on the British Library, AR-assisted learning, the danger of digitising everything, the evolution of language, and the best of Bob Mortimer.
This week's best things The internet gets weird again, what your users are doing on your product pages, shifts in social media dynamics, 14 predictions for 2024, and a Portishead cover.
This week's best things Happy new year. Insights on reading patterns, analysis of shifting behaviour on social media, Google research on AI, thoughts on the New York Times vs OpenAI, hackers, and a library of the future
This week's best things The distorting sprawl of the modern internet, Lego, making exhibitions more accessible, open data, the cables that power the net, a trust crisis in AI, and some LOTR lo-fi beats
This week's best things OpenAI licensing news content, the future of online audiences is niche, how to talk to AI, fighting the tyranny of small decisions, the phrase that ruled the Indian internet in 2023, and Tina Turner
This week's best things Why Japanese websites often look so different, AI eating the internet, tips on effective reflection, making the web feel faster, a viral Chinese hide and seek game, and a Christmas song from Low
This week's best things Have a relaxing visit to the Gallery, the story of the failed collaboration between Niantic and Punchdrunk, Pinterest research on trends for 2024, an LCD Soundsystem cover, and more
This week's best things Spotify's new Tiktok-influenced design, thoughts from Cory Doctorow, ideas about value proposition, a new action research programme, zoom fatigue, and that Christmas ad
This week's best things The godfather of AI, what to do if you lose your phone, harnessing the power of curiosity, practical advice for leading change, and the Tokyo Rockabillies.