But there’s no reason the pop-up blog should just cover lifestyle themes. In fact, there are plenty of reasons why the tech world could use a few.

A Pop-Up Blog Is the TV Miniseries of Blogging

When pop-up blogs first started getting popular, journalism inside-baseball site Poynter covered them, interviewing digital editor of New York Media Ben Williams for more information about their function. Here’s the relevant quote: In other words, pop-up blogs meet a specific need: They highlight a thematic event. While the theme itself is timeless—neither Paris nor relationships will be ending any time soon—the theme is consistent and well-defined enough that it can be poked and prodded in various ways over the course of the pop-up blog’s natural lifespan. Which is why the big tech trends would make great themes. ‘Advertisers like them because they’re kind of a TV miniseries, so you have a beginning, middle and end,’ Williams said.”

Virtual reality. Augmented reality. Drones. Self-driving cars. These themes consistently make headlines in the tech community. They’re all ongoing advancements in tech that are poised to shape our world in a variety of interesting and perhaps non-intuitive ways. If you want to wax philosophical about it, you could say that we’re near a tipping point for any of these emerging technologies. Everyone needs an explainer on them. What better way to document the shift then with a quick pop-up blog that covers the multitude of lifestyle changes we’ll all see as a result of just one of these technologies?

Tech Companies Are Already Interested in Media

Snapchat—well, the company formerly known as Snapchat—launched their own online magazine late last June. Called “Real Life,” the site uses an intentionally old-school format to feature often abstruse essays about the nature of life among 2010’s tech. Earlier in 2016, tech company Intel’s digital publication, “iQ by Intel,” began publishing through Facebook’s Instant Articles feature, which lets publishers load their articles faster while swallowing their control over ads. Intel was the first brand to be allowed into the program, but its a natural fit: Brands want to be seen as industry leaders and the internet’s democratization of media will allow them to succeed at their goal. As I wrote at the time: Add pop-up blogs to the list of media that brands should get into.