@skuwamoto Honestly, not really.
If dragging something messes up the design, it’s usually because I’m exploring or trying things out without thinking too much. I can just undo the change, take a closer look, and everything becomes clear.
@florinpop17 Just show the set time first, then the remaining time once it starts, so the UI can be simplified. And to add a little bit of delight, I’d go for something like EasyPark, as @poyashad said.
Here’s a quick, unpolished example to give an idea—something like this, maybe?
@florianvates Definitely! Much more effective than surveys, if done right. :)
The key thing imho is to never ask leading questions.
If you're doing an interview, it's to listen to them!
If you don't lead the convo, people will talk about what really matters to them, not what you suggest.
@marclou And there weren't any specific size requirements, sooo in the Figma file you'll find different sizes, layouts, and options with just bars or areas, or examples showing just either visitors or revenue!
@marclou Alright, I had to give it a shot! 🙂
I've highlighted the main data points -revenue and visitors- and made the chart clearer by mixing bar and area graphs.
This way the relationship between them is clear but they're easy to tell apart.
@filippkowalski@readreviews_dev I'd add a toggle to let users choose.
GPT-4 is definitely better, but I'd love to use it only for apps/research I really care about.
But often I'm just wandering and trying many things. In this case, I don't really care about the difference in quality between GPT-4 and GPT-3.5
@hobdaydesign If all the elements have the same importance, Layout 1.
If there is a prominent element (eg: a title in a navbar) then Layout 2 with that element at the center.
@marclou Reallyyyy nice!
I would also try using a subtle background for each rule, as it's not clear -at first glance- where one rule ends and another starts.
Just a quick unpolished example, but something like this, what do you think?
@linuz90 Wow, just yesterday I was talking with my gf about this!
Awesome, but definitely dystopian: if you can add knowledge, you can probably add false memories too, I guess.
"We remember:
10% of what we read.
20% of what we hear.
30% of what we see.
50% of what we see and hear.
70% of what we discuss with others.
80% of what we personally experience.
95% of what we teach others."
— Edgar Dale
Be selfish.
Teach others.