@FearedBuck “….if a customer receives an order that is only partially fulfilled, to charge the customer only for the portion of the order the customer received and to adjust any taxes, fees, or gratuities directly associated with the undelivered items.”
@FearedBuck@FearedBuck you’re not quite explaining it right. It’s not that partial incorrect orders will get full refunds. The refund will only be equal to the missing item.
Quit it with the click bait
@levelsio I’ve started seeing these in NYC, they require you to put up a $40 deposit on your card while you rent them which would cover the battery if you stole it.
Rick Rubin says vibe coding is the punk rock of coding:
“If you had something to say, you could say it. You didn't need the expertise.. just your idea and your ability to convey it.”
But most people still use AI to imitate. He's waiting for the moment it actually goes punk.
👋 If you’re a Designer coming to SF for @figma CONFIG, come hang with the @coinbase Design Team.
🍸We're hosting a designer happy hour Monday, May 5 at Monarch. Drinks are on us! Our Design team will be there to chat and talk about what we're building.
https://t.co/MTxafA3Txp
After advising 50+ consumer companies over the last year, the one thing that separates those who can execute and those who can't:
Having a full-time designer in the room at all times
I've met with countless companies that have raised millions—and even one that has raised billions—that do not even have a designer on payroll.
This makes product development broken:
1/ You simply cannot have constructive conversations about ideas without visualizing them in real-time
2/ Your experiments will frequently have inconclusive results because users cannot discover features or they misunderstand how they work
3/ There is no one who can galvanize the team with a vision of what the product could look and feel like
And to be abundantly clear: I'm not referring to visual UI or graphics. I'm talking about someone who can think through the fundamental building blocks of product comprehension—like navigation, interaction and copywriting—and is technically savvy enough to visualize those components in high resolution.
There can certainly be exceptions to not having a designer, like where the CEO is an exceptional visual thinker, but that does not scale beyond a small team.
At the end of day, products live and die in the pixels: it's what the users see and tap. And without someone shepherding that process, you are effectively wandering the desert blind.