Continuum began as a way to spend more time with the questions that sit quietly beneath contemporary life — how people make sense of the environments they move through, how different fields observe change from their own vantage points, and how those perspectives might resonate when placed in conversation. Rather than offering quick interpretations, the project gathers insights from researchers, designers, and field workers who engage these issues directly in their work, allowing ideas to unfold at a human pace. The aim is to create a space where complexity can be approached with patience and curiosity, and where readers can encounter multiple ways of understanding a world that is always in motion.
Continuum is shaped by the editorial perspective of its founder, Trudy Hall, a technology and culture journalist with a background in user interface design and mixed media. Her work explores how digital infrastructures, design decisions, and information environments influence cognition, attention, and experience, and that lens informs a publication that treats understanding as an evolving process rather than a fixed conclusion. By bringing together contributions from people who study these systems up close, Continuum supports a shared effort to notice, interpret, and meaningfully engage with the shifts shaping contemporary life, offering readers a place to think alongside those doing the work.