Hi guys,
I underwent 13 days of personal creative discovery for UI design in April in a bid to:
- Improve my UI design fluency
- Challenge myself
- Further bolster my design portfolio
And I’d say I’ve been mostly able to reach these goals.
So basically the English word “Goodbye” comes from the sentence“God be with ye”and over time, people started pronouncing it faster and more casually:
“God be with ye” → “God b’wi’ ye” → “Godbwye” → “Goodbye”
When designers speak about timelines saying “we did this in just 2 days”, “we had only two weeks to come up with this”.
You’re telling the client that your work is not valuable & that anyone requesting for extra time is just being lazy. You’re hurting the entire industry.
I think coding is slowly killing my design taste.
ever since I started spending more time inside IDEs, something’s shifted in my brain. earlier, my default mode was pure design, obsessing over spacing, micro-interactions, tiny details that no one notices but everyone feels.
now I start with constraints. scalability, edge cases, timelines, dev effort. “can we build this?” shows up way before “does this feel right?”
and the weird part is I still see everything. I know when something feels off, when it could be pushed further, when it lacks that sharpness.
I just… don’t go there anymore.
I cut iterations faster. I compromise earlier. I settle for “this works” instead of “this feels right.”
I think being close to code rewires you. you start filtering ideas through feasibility, and slowly, taste takes a backseat to practicality. craft gets replaced by closure.
and it’s such a silent shift you don’t even realise it’s happening.
is this growth or is this how designers slowly lose their edge without even noticing it ?
We’ve just rolled out four powerful new features in Pewbeam:
- Hands-free voice control, so speakers can switch Bible translations and move to the next verse without the operator clicking. (You can turn this off in Settings.)
- Automatic HDMI display scaling, so the external display now adjusts itself to match your screen size.
- Verse merging, letting you show multiple verses together on one slide.
- Verse splitting, so when a verse is longer than the screen, it automatically continues on a new slide.
- Plus, overall performance and speed are now better.
If you already use the app, you’ll receive an update notification, or you can go to Help → Check for updates.
We are in the news, thank you very much 🙏
As you download, also subscribe to a paid plan enjoy the other features we have for you, like AI sermon notes, multiple outputs, unlimited sessions, etc.
Check it out: https://t.co/ws6tvTOHwU
V1 completed.
Introducing FitGuide 🚀
A web app that:
• Gives clear daily workout plan
• Shows you how to do each exercise.
• Lets you explore a workout library
• Suggests healthy meals
If you’re interested in helping me test, drop this emoji: 🫵🏼
I added the ability to generate more illustrations in the exact style of the first generated illustration. This way you can create multiple illustrations in the same style, ensuring consistency when using a defined, unique style.
Releasing preview to few users today with 100 credit.