Articles

The Art of the Journey: Capturing the Authentic Soul of Your Travels
Photography, Perspectives Mike (founder) Photography, Perspectives Mike (founder)

The Art of the Journey: Capturing the Authentic Soul of Your Travels

We’ve all done it. You arrive at a famous landmark—the Eiffel Tower, the Grand Canyon, Niagra Falls, the Colosseum—and you instinctively reach for your phone. You snap the picture that proves you were there.

There is nothing wrong with that. We all want the memory.

But I’ve learned that the "proof of life" photo is rarely the one that ends up on my wall. The photos that stick with us aren't the ones that show what a place looks like; they are the ones that show what a place feels like.

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The Best Destinations for Art Lovers
Art Guest Author Art Guest Author

The Best Destinations for Art Lovers

Art, in its noble sense, is often confined to specific domains like fine arts, painting or music. Yet for me, it manifests everywhere. I don’t deny beauty and the stimulation of the senses as fundamental to art, but above all, I believe art should be accessible to everyone. It can be a magnificent Impressionist painting, a cinematic performance, or even a perfectly placed football curling into the net after a beautiful team play.

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They Wont Stop Smiling
Writing Guest Author Writing Guest Author

They Wont Stop Smiling

A terrifying alert takes over every screen as a woman's wife is trapped outside. Read the first part of "They Wont Stop Smiling," a new short horror story.

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Why “Minimum” and “Viable” Still Matter in Modern Product Design
Design, Business of Creativity Guest Author Design, Business of Creativity Guest Author

Why “Minimum” and “Viable” Still Matter in Modern Product Design

When Airbnb first launched in 2008, it wasn’t a polished global platform. It was two founders renting out air mattresses in their apartment during a conference. No sleek UI, no sophisticated pricing models, no control systems, but just a scrappy website and the need to pay rent. But guess what? That simple experiment validated one powerful truth. People were willing to pay to stay in someone else’s home. That was their Minimum Viable Product that worked just enough to test the core assumption.

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