I built this thing called Clicky.
It's an AI teacher that lives as a buddy next to your cursor.
It can see your screen, talk to you, and even point at stuff, kinda like having a real teacher next to you.
I've been using it the past few days to learn Davinci Resolve, 10/10.
Inspired by @emilkowalski , quickly vibe-coded a small tool where you can drop in any SVG, tweak particle physics, control timing and delays, and export everything as code or render it as MP4 / GIF. Built this insanely fast with @claudeai
17. Your network outlasts every job you’ll ever have.
Your job isn’t forever, but your network is. Approach it with curiosity and generosity, not transactional hustle.
https://t.co/RpU1c2eI26 (via @addyosmani )
we broke software into “design” and “engineering” and trapped ourselves in frames and specs.
Cursor’s new visual editor lets you play with ideas and designs in code, live.
no more hand-offs, just click, chat, tweak the tiniest detail, in the actual thing you will ship.
@jayneil@figma Sorry for the long reply—and I’m still in awe that you responded. Honestly, this made my whole month, and I’m glad I could make your day too. I can’t stress enough how much your work has helped me. It’s a permanent part of my mentor toolkit alongside @GrowthDotDesign.
@jayneil for your next interview for @figma & product design can the subject be "Complicated User Flows"?
Love what you're doing and thank you for taking the time to read my tweet. :)
@jayneil@figma I’ve noticed that early-stage flow mapping is often where up-and-coming designers need the most support, and it’s an area where I’d love to grow my own confidence as well. Having a clearer north star for what “great” looks like would be transformative for me and many others.
@jayneil@figma I’ve seen many designers who haven’t fully mastered it, which makes growth in this domain difficult.
Your interviews have already been an invaluable resource. I’ve applied so many of the insights you’ve shared to both my own work and to mentoring others.
@jayneil@figma I’m curious about what “best in class” flows look like, how designers go from zero-to-one, whether they follow a set approach, and what best practices they’ve developed along the way. The zero-to-one stage feels like the most challenging part; even at large companies.
@jayneil@figma I’d love to learn more about how both individuals and teams approach mapping complex user flows—especially what happens in the early stages before collaboration kicks in.