Every person now has a choice at any moment in time for how to entertain themselves and they're always going to go to the best option because it's one tap away on their phone
But a shift has happened nonetheless: the Internet used to reflect our real-world lives and the physical world. Increasingly, our real lives and physical worlds are just a reflection of our digital ones.
Automate form filling
For every government form in every country, autosuggest inputs. Or at least show worked examples. Crowdsource new forms from users, SEO for the form name, and make it one-click to submit.
Start with the most popular, then work your way down.
Over the past few decades, a quiet inversion has taken place that few notice. During the industrial age, the value of the physical content of goods was enormous compared to the value of the mental content. The bending of steel and other metals, the welding or bolting of them together, the processes of replication-- the smelting, pounding, twisting,... See more
A few years ago, I started noticing invitations coming with a set of rules. Kind of boring or controlling, right? Wrong. In this multicultural, intersectional society, where more of us are gathered and raised by people and with etiquette unlike our own, where we don't share the etiquette, unspoken norms are trouble, whereas pop-up rules allow us to... See more
Large auction houses intermediate transactions and have partly moved their operations online, but they remain the center of gravity for trust. In that regard, thinking that blockchain is a silver bullet and will disrupt the organization of the higher-end of fine art markets can sound a little ingenuous right now.