We love sharing the most original ideas from our users. This time we want to show an inspiring project as part of the “Design of the Week” selection.
We love sharing the most original ideas from our users. This time we want to show an inspiring project as part of the “Design of the Week” selection.
We love sharing the most original ideas from our users. This time we want to show an inspiring project as part of the “Design of the Week” selection.
I set up this blog to share interior design, travel and lifestyle inspiration for simple, relaxed living at home and beyond. You’ll find home tours, advice and tips, interviews, reviews, postcards from places I love and more – always with a focus on minimalism, muted colours and timeless, considered design.
What Twitter is today is not necessarily the best or most useful version of what is possible for users moving forward. The more fascinating outcome of Musk’s acquisition, and a potential exodus of users, is how it might give rise to the next iteration of the social internet somewhere else.
The inevitably of Twitter’s end should not be cause for despair—there is excitement in what awaits us on the other side, in what comes next. That, for me, has always been the addictive charm of the social internet: that we continually find new ways to interact, create, be. That no matter what, we never stagnate.
One of the many things inherent in the digital age—and especially on social media, where the tinkering and retooling of relationships is a constant—is the certainty of impermanence, the assurance of the ephemeral. Things are here and then, in a spectacular flash, they are not.
Comments
adamgordon
Thanks for sharing this post, it’s really helpful for me.
cmsmasters
Glad to be of service.
annabrown
This is awesome!!
cmsmasters
Thanks.