The Editorially founders are joining the product team at Vox Media.
byToday brings some sad news: Editorially is closing its doors.
byWhat makes for a good remote culture, and why it’s likely here to stay.
byWriter and editor Adrian Chen explores anonymity, meeting strangers online, how the internet is not like us, and more.
byInsight into how Editorially’s design has evolved.
byErika Hall explores the term “disruption,” and how its commanding presence has seeped into our culture and personal lives.
byWe’ve released a whole slew of improvements to Editorially, all designed to make it easier to find and organize your work: tagging, sorting and filtering, and archiving.
byPoet Rebecca Lindenberg romps through waterfalls and languages to bring us this intimate and cogent take on “code-switching.”
byWhy we need to cook more — and a plan for how to do it.
byA close look at the origins and evolution of the word “meritocracy,” and the politics that our language reveals.
byWhy it’s important to understand the elements behind a form before echoing and paying homage to the form itself.
byWhat does it take to create an intellectually and artistically diverse environment from scratch?
byWriter and editor Roxane Gay unpacks the nature and usefulness of social media, and specifically turns a critical eye toward our ongoing interactions with Twitter.
byI got on the wrong plane with a very strange briefcase, and it might be about to save my life.
byIn just a few years, gestures have become one of the primary ways we interact with computers.
byWriter, designer, and publisher Craig Mod pairs a travelogue with a product story in this piece about Hi, a new tool for storytelling.
byCan email be a space for publishing? And if so, how is it different from other mediums?
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