— End of feature —
– The interface is whatever is at hand: a missed call, a photo of a handwritten ledger, a voice note at 2x speed, a string of 15 emojis that everyone decodes perfectly. hublaagram me
And maybe that is the true feature. Not another app. Not another feed. Just a quiet, radical idea: that the most powerful connection isn’t global — it’s the person who knows your name, your chai order, and still sends you a voice note asking, “Khana kha liya?” (Have you eaten?) — End of feature — – The interface
“My mother runs a home bakery,” says Dhruv, a Bengaluru-based coder. “She has 400 ‘followers’ on her Hublaagram. Zero Reels. Zero hashtags. But if she posts ‘Eggless cake ready at 4 PM’ in our apartment’s WhatsApp group, it sells out in 12 minutes. Try doing that with an Instagram shop.” For years, big tech believed the future was global, faceless, and infinite. But Hublaagram reveals a counter-trend: people are exhausted by abundance. Not another feed
— End of feature —
– The interface is whatever is at hand: a missed call, a photo of a handwritten ledger, a voice note at 2x speed, a string of 15 emojis that everyone decodes perfectly.
And maybe that is the true feature. Not another app. Not another feed. Just a quiet, radical idea: that the most powerful connection isn’t global — it’s the person who knows your name, your chai order, and still sends you a voice note asking, “Khana kha liya?” (Have you eaten?)
“My mother runs a home bakery,” says Dhruv, a Bengaluru-based coder. “She has 400 ‘followers’ on her Hublaagram. Zero Reels. Zero hashtags. But if she posts ‘Eggless cake ready at 4 PM’ in our apartment’s WhatsApp group, it sells out in 12 minutes. Try doing that with an Instagram shop.” For years, big tech believed the future was global, faceless, and infinite. But Hublaagram reveals a counter-trend: people are exhausted by abundance.