The Kind Of Curiosity I Never Outgrew
I’m Caleb Morrison, and I live in Raleigh, North Carolina, where my desk usually looks like a small argument between notebooks, charging cords, receipts, coffee cups, and whatever product I’m trying to figure out that week. I’ve always been drawn to the point where ordinary life and modern tools meet. Not the flashy side of technology, but the practical side. The side that asks whether something actually makes the day easier.
That habit started long before this site. I was the person people came to when a device would not connect, a setting made no sense, or a product looked useful online but confusing in real life. I liked being useful in those small moments.
Learning To Explain Things Simply
My background is in communication and digital media, and for a good part of my working life, I found myself around people who needed plain answers more than impressive ones. I have helped with digital tools, customer questions, setup problems, and the kind of everyday confusion that happens when a product promises simplicity but arrives with twelve steps and unclear instructions.
That shaped the way I look at things. I pay attention to how a product feels after the excitement fades. I notice whether the directions make sense, whether the buttons are where your hand expects them to be, whether the cheaper option is quietly good enough, and whether the expensive one actually earns its place.
The Notes That Kept Piling Up
For years, I kept small notes before buying almost anything. A jacket, a desk lamp, a charger, a car-care item, a pair of glasses, a household tool. I would compare the obvious details first, then start noticing the hidden ones. Weight, fit, storage, cleaning, battery life, return policies, replacement parts, the strange little complaints that show up again and again in real customer reviews.

Friends began asking before they bought things. My family did too. Sometimes I gave a quick answer. Other times, I sent long messages that were probably more detailed than anyone expected. After a while, I realized I was already reviewing products in my own quiet way. I just had not given those notes a proper home yet.
Why Global Digital Week Began In 2026
I started Global Digital Week in 2026 because I wanted one place for the kind of thinking I was already doing. Not loud opinions. Not perfect-product promises. Just honest, first-person notes from someone who likes figuring out whether something is actually worth bringing into daily life.
The name fits the way I think about modern buying. So many choices now happen through screens, search results, ratings, photos, and claims that all compete for attention. I wanted this site to feel like a pause in the middle of that noise. A place where a product can be looked at with patience instead of pressure, and where the small practical details are allowed to matter.
What I Hope Feels Useful Here
I do not write as someone who believes every purchase needs to be turned into a research project. Most people just want to spend their money with a little more confidence and a little less regret. That is the reader I think about when I write.
Here, I share honest thoughts on products I have used, compared, researched, or understood through real everyday needs. I care about comfort, clarity, durability, setup, value, and whether something keeps being useful after the first impression fades. If a product has a place, I want to understand where that place is. If it does not, I would rather say that plainly.
More than anything, I hope this site feels like getting a careful answer from someone who has already stood in the aisle, opened too many tabs, read the confusing reviews, and asked the extra question before choosing.
