Design for super early startups seems like it has become increasingly a lost art.
Great simple UX that has clear call-to-actions, obvious nav, good use of contrast and no distracting ornamentation ... sadly waning.
How you do anything is how you do everything.
Eliminate repetitive support issues, deliver instant knowledge, and boost productivity with @moveworks Agentic AI copilot and #MicrosoftTeams https://t.co/s3KvkRbzhd
Learning all about Living Interfaces with @joshpay, Anton Borzov and Kiril Lazarev at @aiusergroup conference.
Living interfaces
⁃ Human touch of improvements into websites
⁃ Self improving and evolving interfaces
⁃ Internet that is personalized to you
#uxdesign#aiux#ai
Great presentation by Alex Ambroziak of @Shutterstock showing branding designs by Shutterspace Studio team using their custom AI and generating branding assets just from briefs at @aiusergroup conference. #branding#design#ai
Excited to attending the @aiusergroup AI User Conference in SF today and meeting all the design people. First conference since Covid lockdowns. #ux#aiux#ai
America was supposed to be Art Deco - a thread of 10 iconic Art Deco designs 🧵
1. "Mercury" - a streamliner passenger train which operated between 1936 and 1959
Kinda relates to high cost of living in Bay Area. Harrison Marshall 28 pays $62 a month to live in a dumpster he built for $5,000—take a look inside. https://t.co/51cuk6oami
1/ Here are ten mistakes I made as an early manager. When I fixed these behaviors, my career took off. Even more personally rewarding, so did many of those working for me. 👇
Big thanks to Justin Porter for stopping by #Dusty HQ to share insight into how our #FieldPrinter system helped @TruebeckConst shave weeks off their #construction schedule on a complex project. Valuable learning opportunity for our entire team! #getdusty#DustyRobotics#BIM
As winter approaches, here's a story about why hardware is hard. ❄️🥶
About a year ago, we started getting reports from the field about undesirable behavior when our robots were turned on. They would behave unpredictably.
@johncutlefish Sketch + Invisionapp were killer combo. People took a leap to collaborate easier. Figma came along, delivered single product for design & collaboration for every team.
Rise of @figma has been nothing short of meteoric. All the product my team used in past - @InVisionApp, @goabstract have been turned into default features on Figma. Solutions for the problems with collaborating and sharing work is built right into the browser. #ux#design
InVision announced last week they are laying off 50% of their team (400+ people).
They definitely made missteps as a company. But from the outside it seems like Figma completely ate their lunch.
What made Figma so successful?