A new generation of social media apps is popping up as users grow weary of apps like Instagram and TikTok.Matt Cardy/Getty Images
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Welcome back to our Saturday edition! I'm here with a question: Would you ever go on a honeymoon-style trip with your best friend? One reporter enjoyed her buddymoon — and found that her 14-year friendship was strengthened.
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Dispatch
Social media is getting a second wind
I joined Facebook with much enthusiasm back when they were only approving folks with a .edu email address. Before long, I was using the Mark Zuckerberg-created platform to upload a smattering of unedited photos from my digital camera, find out who was in my classes on campus, and "poke" old high school buddies.
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Soon my account became a graveyard of photos, now hidden and viewable by "only me." Instead of coming up with pithy and creative — if I do say so myself — statuses, I began doing things IRL instead. I'm not alone: Sharing on social media has tapered off, Business Insider reported back in 2023, but consuming content hasn't. Now social media platforms — Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and others — are clamoring to get users to stay just a little while longer.
Instagram beat TikTok in downloads last year, mostly thanks to Threads and Reels. And now Facebook's Poke feature is back, and apparently a hit with Gen Z, a demographic that was waning on the platform.
It's clear social media isn't giving up without a fight — and right now, it seems we're OK with that.
Kate Middleton's diagnosis
Kate Middleton, the Princess of Wales, revealed yesterday she's been diagnosed with cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy.
She said she received the diagnosis while undergoing abdominal surgery in January. One oncologist told BI it's not uncommon for doctors to screen for cancer after invasive surgeries.
BI's reporter traveled to Finland's northernmost municipality, Utsjoki, to check something off her bucket list: catching the northern lights. Nearly 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle, the tiny village offers some of the best chances at seeing the aurora.
Her excursion was filled with surprises — like that the lights are less vivid in real life than in photos, and that she only saw them once on a five-night trip.
You may know him for his work with OpenAI, the parent company of ChatGPT. But Altman has another, lesser-known endeavor: Retro Biosciences.
The $180 million project has an ambitious goal. By betting big on three antiaging methods, Altman hopes to add 10 healthy, enjoyable years to humans' lives.
Growing up, Pete Ballmer knew his family was wealthy — but didn't realize just how rich they really were.
Despite being billionaire and former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's son, Pete says he and his siblings didn't get more expensive Christmas gifts. They didn't get fancy cars. He writes that he even felt a bit ashamed of it, and downplayed his wealth.
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