Most people see cruise ships as vacations. Colin sees them as homes.
With the launch of LiveAtSea.com, heβs betting on a shift that feels obvious once you hear it: if people can work from anywhere, why not live anywhereβ¦ including the ocean?
This isnβt theory. Itβs already happening.
The early content on the site points to a growing movement of people choosing long-term cruise living over traditional housing. Not because itβs flashy, but because it solves real problems. Predictable costs, built-in community, travel without logistics, and a lifestyle that replaces routine with motion.
One post breaks down the difference between world cruises and residential ships.
Another article highlights how ships like the Avora Lumina are selling quickly, signaling real demand. A recent post asks the bigger question: is this the beginning of an entirely new category of living?
It might be.
Because once you remove the assumption that βhomeβ has to be fixed, everything changes. Housing, travel, social life, even identity. Youβre no longer visiting places. Youβre rotating through them.
Thatβs the pattern Colin tends to spot early. Not just trends, but shifts in behavior that become businesses.
LiveAtSea isnβt just a blog. Itβs a signal.
The same way remote work quietly rewired where people live, this is what happens when mobility becomes permanent.
And like most new categories, it sounds nicheβ¦ until it doesnβt.
