Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Journal.
The Day the Train Went Backwards
Yes, the latest train line is named after one of my favourite 80s indie rock groups. Yes, I have already written about it from the opening of its second line. And yes, it has spoiled me to the point that I have avoided the metro more often than is healthy.
By Kendall Defoe 2 months ago in Journal
Grace Behind the Spotlight The Life Journey of Jo Todter Daubner
Introduction Jo Todter Daubner is often recognized because of her family connection, yet her own life story is far more personal and understated than the public might expect. She first appeared in the media as the daughter of the well known news presenter Susanne Daubner, but Jo quickly showed that she had no intention of living her life in the center of attention. Instead, she followed her own rhythm, shaped by curiosity, independence, and a growing desire for privacy. This introduction offers a clear overview of who she is, how her identity has formed over the years, and why interest in her continues despite her reserved nature.
By MUHAMMAD SHAFIE2 months ago in Journal
Paid Advertising Services: What Most People Learn Only After Running Ads. AI-Generated.
The first time someone told me they were confused by paid advertising, it sounded less like a complaint and more like disappointment. They had followed the steps, chosen a platform, spent a careful amount of money, and watched the numbers appear. Clicks went up. Impressions stacked quickly. But there was no clear sense of progress.
By Anthony Rodgers2 months ago in Journal
How to navigate Krabi
Krabi, Thailand’s laid-back resort province, is characterised by stunning natural beauty, awesome adventures and lots of places which are worth visiting. Since this area is considerably smaller than many of the other provinces in the nation, there are several easy means to navigate the distances between attractions. Whichever mode you choose is purely your choice. Here is a guide to help make the right choice.
By Jeewanthi Armstrong2 months ago in Journal
The New Wave of Home Bar Culture
A Shift Toward Everyday Entertaining The home bar is no longer a relic in a paneled basement. It lives where the action is and works on any Tuesday night. Millennials favor small groups and easy flow, which means bar zones that tuck beside a sofa, slide along a narrow cabinet, or roll in on a slim cart. The goal is warmth, not flash. Think edited bottles, a clean work surface, and tools that earn their keep. Hosts skip the scramble for reservations and pour at home, where playlists stay low and the light is kind. Craft culture supports the shift. People practice equal parts classics, shake fewer sugary drinks, and keep vermouth sealed and cold. Simple syrups are labeled and dated. A squeeze bottle of honey syrup does double duty for tea at breakfast and a Gold Rush after dinner. Ice molds stack in the freezer so the first round feels calm, not rushed.
By Marie Colvin2 months ago in Journal
Balancing Accessibility and Performance in Web Development: Best Practices for US Businesses in 2026
If you’re building or revamping a site for a US business in 2026, you can’t treat accessibility and performance as “nice-to-haves” anymore. Users expect fast, smooth experiences—and regulators and customers expect those experiences to be usable by everyone. The trick is balancing accessibility and performance in web development so you don’t speed up your site at the cost of excluding people, or make it accessible but painfully slow.
By Jessica Bennett2 months ago in Journal
A debut that refuses exposure: Piergiorgio Corallo and the anatomy of a first step
Piergiorgio Corallo did not step into music. He emerged from it the way some objects are found rather than made. Before In via di sviluppo, his name circulated quietly in Italian visual circuits: painter, sculptor, photographer — someone for whom matter has always mattered more than exposure. The shift into sound was not a conversion but an extension, the same gesture of removal and incision carried into another frequency.
By The Global Verge2 months ago in Journal
Office 365 Tenant to Tenant Migration Best Practices
The Office 365 tenant-to-tenant migration task is more than just your mere Office 365 data relocation but it is more about your business and protection of data integrity. When organizations expand, merge, or integrate multiple Office 365 tenants into one, they need to migrate their Office 365 tenant data to another Office 365 tenant. This process is called Office 365 tenant-to-tenant migration.
By Claire Bowen2 months ago in Journal
A Letter From Future Me
Life has been good to me. Not painless—not easy—but good. I’ve suffered, sure. Everyone does. Some would argue I took a heavier share. But suffering was never something I scorned. It taught me more than comfort ever did. It hardened me in the right ways, and eventually it even became a voluntary pastime. A discipline. A craft. Something I strengthened myself against the way others train for sport.
By That ‘Freedom’ Guy2 months ago in Journal
Accent Wall Paint Tips to Add Style and Depth to Any Room
When people talk about quick upgrades that completely change a space, painting an accent wall is almost always at the top of the list. Interior painters often say that a single well-chosen color can shift a room's mood, make the layout look more intentional, and add personality without a full renovation.
By Robert Clark2 months ago in Journal
The Age of Hyper-Performance: Why We Feel Guilty Doing Nothing
We live in an era where slowing down feels almost like a crime. We check email while brushing our teeth. We listen to speed-increased podcasts to “consume more knowledge in less time.” We feel anxious when we’re not doing something “useful.” Even leisure has been rebranded — reading becomes self-improvement, gym becomes optimization, and hobbies become potential income streams.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan2 months ago in Journal











