@systemdesignone Question is, how many self-built apps actually made real revenue, and how long did it take?
The internet is already full of apps and competition is huge., To really judge vibe-coded apps, I think we still need more time to witness long-term success stories.
واحد من المشاهد الخالدة، مشهد لم تلتقط العدسات مثله مطلقاً
عندما قام الجيش الاسرائيلي بقصف أحد المنازل في قطاع غزة خلال حرب الابادة بصاروخ حربي ثقيل بينما تركض طفلة صغيرة محاولةً تفاديه
مشهد لا يجب أن ينساه العالم أبداً
🧡 63 free design skills for Claude Code
Teaching AI what designers know so it can work with us, not around us.
Agentic skills, commands, and plugins for design, from research to systems, UI, interaction, and delivery.
→ https://t.co/7hPtDZfvCe
By Marie Claire Dean
AB de Villiers drops a truth bomb on T20 openers. 🤯
"The powerplay rule should be removed because the fielding restrictions in the first six overs are unbelievably unfair to middle-order batters.
It is frustrating to have my IPL run totals compared to opening batters, who get to face significantly more deliveries while the fielding restrictions are in place.
When people say an opener is the 'best ever' because they have 8,000 runs, my reaction is, 'No, I'm better than him. He's just faced more balls'.
Almost all the Orange Cap winners are opening batters who build their stats in favorable conditions, which is just batting to win stuff. Opening the batting is the easiest thing in the world, especially in India, because of the short boundaries and great wickets".
Israel has killed tens of thousands of Palestinian women and girls in its genocidal war on Gaza.
On International Women's Day, we look at the number of women and girls Israel killed in Gaza in 2025.
#Infograph
Sri Lankan arrangements & hospitality — world class! 🇱🇰
Indian and Pakistan fans praise Sri Lanka after the successful hosting of the India vs Pakistan clash in Colombo.
From smooth entry to cleanliness and electric atmosphere, the island delivered on the biggest stage
Sri Lanka is facing a long road to recovery. 🇱🇰💔
Thousands have lost their homes and livelihoods, and support is urgently needed to help families rebuild.
Special bank accounts have been opened for local and international donations. Every contribution can make a real difference.
Stand with Sri Lanka. 🙏🇱🇰
Sun is back☀️
After days of heavy rains and the impact of Cyclone Ditwah, the sun is finally shining again.
With the cyclone now moving away from Sri Lanka, skies are beginning to clear.
Invisible UX is coming 🔥
And it’s going to change how we design products, forever.
For decades, UX design has been about guiding users through an experience.
We’ve done that with visible interfaces:
Menus. Buttons. Cards. Sliders.
We’ve obsessed over layouts, states, and transitions.
But with AI, a new kind of interface is emerging:
One that’s invisible.
One that’s driven by intent, not interaction.
Think about it:
You used to:
→ Open Spotify
→ Scroll through genres
→ Click into “Focus”
→ Pick a playlist
Now you just say:
“Play deep focus music.”
No menus. No tapping. No UI.
Just intent → output.
You used to:
→ Search on Airbnb
→ Pick dates, guests, filters
→ Scroll through 50+ listings
Now we’re entering a world where you guide with words:
“Find me a cabin near Oslo with a sauna, available next weekend.”
So the best UX becomes barely visible.
Why does this matter?
Because traditional UX gives users options.
AI-native UX gives users outcomes.
Old UX:
“Here are 12 ways to get what you want.”
New UX:
“Just tell me what you want & we’ll handle the rest.”
And this goes way beyond voice or chat.
It’s about reducing friction.
Designing systems that understand intent.
Respond instantly.
And get out of the way.
The UI isn’t disappearing.
It’s mainly dissolving into the background.
So what should designers do?
Rethink your role.
Going forward you’ll not just lay out screens.
You’ll design interactions without interfaces.
That means:
→ Understanding how people express goals
→ Guiding model behavior through prompt architecture
→ Creating invisible guardrails for trust, speed, and clarity
You are basically designing for understanding.
The future of UX won’t be seen.
It will be felt.
Welcome to the age of invisible UX.
Ready for it?
there's a quiet shift happening in how we design software. we're moving from UX to AX (agentic experience).
traditional UX is screen-centric. you tap a button, product reacts, job done. every session starts from zero.
designers pre-plan every path with hard-coded flows. users fill out forms and dropdowns because the product remembers nothing about you.
success = fewer clicks and faster flows.
trust = "interface looks clean so it must work."
agentic experience is relationship-centric. the agent keeps track of ongoing goals, nudges next steps, improves over time. you're never starting over.
the system plans its own path - it senses, infers, chooses actions the designer didn't script. context is learned, not asked. preferences, patterns, even team norms are remembered.
success = earned trust and compounding value. metrics shift to retention, satisfaction with decisions, how much autonomy you hand over.
trust = the agent shows its work early, then tapers as confidence grows, like a human teammate.
most apps will eventually work this way.
your email client will learn your writing style and priorities. your design tool will remember your brand guidelines and suggest layouts. your CRM will track relationship patterns and recommend next moves.
the best products will anticipate needs, remember context, and get better with every interaction.
shoutout to @meetLCA for this visual and hit them up if you need help designing these AX experiences (they lead the charge)
we're moving from tools you use to partners you work with.
the companies building ax instead of ux will own the next decade.
users will stop tolerating dumb software that makes them repeat themselves.
once you experience true AX, traditional UX feels broken. there's no going back.