About Us • Discoverology
About Us

About Us

Every day, thousands of fake news stories, recycled content and ridiculous listicles (for example 26 Face Swaps That Will Make You Ridiculously Uncomfortable), fill our social media feeds and inboxes. This makes it difficult to find meaningful, insightful and inspiring stories you really want to read or watch.

Browse less, know more.

Every day, our curators visit hundreds of websites and YouTube accounts. From that enormous amount of content, we pick the most meaningful things that are worth reading, watching, learning, buying, visiting and sharing with your friends or colleagues.

Say goodbye to information overload, noise and fake news. We’ll save you some valuable browsing time to focus on the things that make you a little bit smarter.

What we offer

In our read section, you’ll find the most insightful stories from around the internet, from long reads to the latest innovation and from new discoveries in science to stunning architecture.

In the watch section, you’ll find free documentaries as well as award-winning short films and other interesting video content.

In the learn section, you’ll find learning guides to 55+ topics, from artificial intelligence to public speaking. Each learning guide includes the best articles and educational videos from around the web. Everything is free and you can learn at your own pace.

In the buy section, you’ll find the most innovative products and original gifts you can buy on the internet.

How we pick content

We don’t do algorithms. We are the algorithm. A team of human beings. We filter content based on what we believe is the most interesting and inspiring content. We focus on content that will hopefully make you a bit smarter, inspire you to explore new things or do something differently.

We hate clickbait. Those ridiculous headlines that trick you into clicking on them but only show you rubbish content. Of all the great pieces of content we see every day, we write a short summary, so you clearly know what you’re about to read or watch.

You will see older articles pop up. These must-read stories have stood the test of time. They’re just as relevant today as the day they were published. In fact, one of the best stories ever written is from 1946: John Hersey’s article about Hiroshima in The New Yorker.

If you want to send us some great content you have discovered or if you have ideas about how we can improve our service, email us at hello (at) discoverlogy.com or talk to us on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram.

Happy discovering!

 

p.s. when you buy products through links on our site, we may earn a small commission.

We use cookies on this website to analyse your use of our products and services, provide content from third parties and assist with our marketing efforts. Learn more about our use of cookies and available controls: cookie policy. Please be aware that your experience may be disrupted until you accept cookies.