One Good
1. Identifying your "one thing"
It can be challenging to actually identify your " one thing ".
But it can help to consider this concept less as a single destination, and more as a direction .
It reminds me of a popular analogy: "How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time ".
Imagine an alternative universe, where you'd never heard of Netflix.
(The f... See more
It can be challenging to actually identify your " one thing ".
But it can help to consider this concept less as a single destination, and more as a direction .
It reminds me of a popular analogy: "How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time ".
Imagine an alternative universe, where you'd never heard of Netflix.
(The f... See more
Peter Ramsey • How to Reduce Churn by Doing Your "One Thing"
Discovery problems are as old as civilization. In recent years, however, the ever-growing role of the internet has suddenly made these problems much more difficult. The reason is simple: In the internet era, we are faced with an overwhelming number of options to choose from. In the mood for some music? Spotify has more than 70 million tracks on off... See more
Martin Gould • Discovering Things We Truly Love
as much as the feeds brought me things I never would have seen or heard otherwise, my overdependence on them was also cutting me off from a different realm of experiences that I had forgotten about over the course of the decade: the encounter with scarcity rather than infinity, the process of judging and choosing for myself what I wanted to see in
... See moreKyle Chayka • Filterworld
Escaping the Attention Economy - Last Week I Learned
last-week-i-learned.pika.pageThe digital dominance of the 21st Century has sorted us into our own tailored versions of online reality, where we drown in ads and information. It's overwhelming, noisy, and ephemeral. It's hard to have a simple conversation, let alone align the globe on a future worth building.
cameronwiese.com • It's time to build: A New World's Fair
The digital dominance of the 21st Century has sorted us into our own tailored versions of online reality, where we drown in ads and information. It's overwhelming, noisy, and ephemeral. It's hard to have a simple conversation, let alone align the globe on a future worth building.