Hummingbird_2024_3 !!exclusive!!

: It is often distributed via specific server IP addresses or internal company portals rather than broad consumer app stores, suggesting it may be a specialized industrial, engineering, or internal enterprise tool.

The parallel to human social and informational ecology is stark. We are witnessing the fragmentation of what the sociologist Émile Durkheim called the “social lattice”—the institutions, public spaces, and shared temporal rhythms that once connected individuals into a meaningful whole. In 2024, the replacement of the public square by the algorithmic feed has produced a landscape of isolated flowers: niche communities, echo chambers, and micro-solidarities that are dazzling but disconnected. A hummingbird can survive on one flower for a few minutes, but it needs a trapline —a circuit of many flowers visited in a reliable sequence—to survive the day. Our digital traplines have been broken by engagement-based algorithms that reward novelty over continuity. We flit from outrage to outrage, from trend to trend, never establishing the stable circuit of attention that allows for deep pollination of ideas. hummingbird_2024_3