Note: This post updates every week.
This isn’t your usual design resource list or just design inspiration.
You won’t just find Figma tutorials or UX case studies here (the internet already has plenty of those).
Instead, this is a collection of things that made me pause, think, and occasionally fall into a very deep YouTube rabbit hole.
Over time, I’ve saved videos and ideas about all kinds of things — technology experiments, fascinating cities, engineering projects, founders’ stories, strange inventions, mindfulness, spiritualism, and the occasional oddly satisfying topic… like pancakes or cheese.
Because the truth is, great designers don’t just study design — they stay curious about how the world works.
So this is my personal link list.
No schedule, no algorithm, no “content strategy.”
Just interesting things from around the internet that feel worth sharing.
If it sparks curiosity, makes you think differently, or gives your brain a small upgrade — it belongs here.
March 2026
1. A Reminder to Discover Why You’re Here
A man is born into the world with promises that life will be good. As he grows, he chases money, pleasure, and success, believing these things will bring happiness.
For brief moments, they do, but the feeling never lasts, and his deeper hunger remains.
Years pass as he keeps searching for fulfillment in the same places, hoping the next achievement or pleasure will finally satisfy him.
But when his life ends, the questions he carried are still unanswered.
The story serves as a reminder: a life spent only chasing temporary pleasures often leaves the soul unfulfilled.
True understanding comes from asking deeper questions about who we are and why we are here — before it’s too late.
2. When Urban Life Meets Nature — The Copenhagen Way
While traveling north, Jack Harries kept asking himself how we can live better.
He thought solitude in nature would bring clarity, but it mostly brought loneliness. Visiting Copenhagen changed that perspective.
The city blends nature and urban life beautifully — swimmable water, tree-lined streets, and playful spaces like Superkilen.
It reminded him that living better isn’t about escaping into the wild, but about designing our cities so nature and people can thrive together.
3. Muji: How “No-Brand” Design Became a Global Icon ($4.3 Billion Last Year)
Muji built a global brand by removing everything unnecessary—no logos, flashy packaging, or hype—focusing instead on simplicity, honest materials, calm design, and consistency, proving that in a noisy world, people often value quiet, thoughtful products that leave space for their own lives.
4. Inside Hola Mohalla: A Unique Sikh Festival of Courage and Culture
During the vibrant Hola Mohalla festival in Punjab, travelers explored Anandpur Sahib, where thousands gathered to celebrate Sikh history, culture, martial arts, horses, music, colors, and community, creating an intense, energetic, and unforgettable cultural experience.
5. Kamoka: Life on One of the World’s Most Remote Pearl Farms
On a remote Pacific atoll, three generations of the Kamoka family run a pearl farm where life is simple, self-reliant, and deeply connected to nature—growing food, caring for oysters, and creating sustainable pearls while proving that patience, community, and respect for the ocean can turn isolation into a meaningful way of life.
5. Life in the 40 Acres Woods: Building a Tiny Cottage from Scratch
A man turns his dream of escaping the noise of modern life into reality by building a tiny off-grid cottage on his 40 acres of wilderness, creating a small cabin designed to blend with nature and enjoy a simpler life surrounded by the outdoors.
6. My TV Remote Broke… So I Built a Smarter One
When a failing TV remote sparked frustration, the creator decided to build a custom one from scratch—designing the shape, buttons, and electronics to create a fully programmable smart remote that controls everything from TV to lights, proving how a simple problem can turn into a powerful DIY innovation.
7. The Art of Solving Problems with What You Have
For this creator, the real joy comes from solving everyday problems using whatever is around them—turning scrap materials into clever solutions, learning new skills like sewing, and building tools, furniture, and systems that make life easier.
Over time, these small projects become more than just fixes; they become a way to create, experiment, and express personality, where imperfections aren’t flaws but proof that something was thoughtfully made by hand.
