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37 votes
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We tried and failed to find performance differences in our twenty-six microwaves
58 votes -
Rams (2018) - A Dieter Rams documentary - Free today
4 votes -
South Africa recalls cough syrup sold in at least six countries
7 votes -
The business of bad medicine
4 votes -
At the Grizzly & Wolf Discovery Center in West Yellowstone, Montana, you can get a product certified as bear-resistant... by testing it with actual bears
21 votes -
How are you reacting to the current climate in the product design and UX space?
I have been a product designer and experience architect since before “UX” even meant anything. I’ve never wanted for work, and I’ve always been confident in my skills as a leader both on the...
I have been a product designer and experience architect since before “UX” even meant anything.
I’ve never wanted for work, and I’ve always been confident in my skills as a leader both on the product and business strategy side.
But especially recently, I’ve started to feel some tremors I’ve never felt before:
- A massive amount of young talent has flooded the industry via UX programs and boot camps - and much of them are quite talented!
- Layoffs have further upped the available workers
- AI and Automation have made good designers even more efficient, and even inexperienced designers can now move at the speed of light.
I also have some personal situations at play:
- I took the last few years to launch and grow my own product business - scaling that eventually to an exit. So I’ve been out of the “product designer” game a bit - as I’ve been immersed in everything that comes with being a founder and startup growth.
- I now have a family - I can’t grind as hard as I used to.
All this gives me some qualms about the ability to find work in the future.
With an industry now flooded in talent, and AI that commodifies and democratizes UI design - making it easier than ever to spit out good design - is there job security for product designers the next few years?
What does that look like? How will pay be affected? Where will the opportunity be?
14 votes -
Why Lego won – the competition looked identical, so how did they pull it off?
10 votes -
The Museum of Failure’s latest exhibition is an epic portrait of failures big and small—from the Ford Edsel, to CNN+
4 votes -
A gallery of Sony product design going back decades
5 votes -
How the inventor of the troll doll missed out on a fortune
5 votes -
The forgotten story of Modulex – Lego's lost cousin
7 votes -
Defective vapor chamber may be causing RX 7900 XTX overheating issue. A recall could be on the horizon.
9 votes -
Lego has announced it will work to remove gender stereotypes from its toys – research reveals harmful stereotypes still hindering girls, boys and their parents
9 votes -
Nissin to sell a fork specially designed for its cup ramen
17 votes -
Thoughts on user growth and product
5 votes -
The Cooper Hewitt Digital Collection
7 votes -
The Apple Watch is five years old today: Original Apple Watch designer Imran Chaudri shares facts about its development and origins
@imranchaudhri: here's a reproduction of my original sketch for the home screen. the shape of the circular icon was driven by the clock that lived in the centre of what i originally called the dock. the crown gave the home screen a dimensionality, allowing you to scrub through layers of the ui.
7 votes -
Will the millennial aesthetic ever end?
12 votes -
Less human than human: The design philosophy of Steve Jobs
9 votes -
Hand dryers vs. paper towels: The surprisingly dirty fight for the right to dry your hands
11 votes -
Jony Ive on the Apple Watch and Big Tech’s responsibilities
5 votes -
‘I Fundamentally Believe That My Time at Reddit Made the World a Worse Place’
31 votes -
Testing the June intelligent oven
10 votes -
Six strawberry brands linked to needle contamination across Australian east coast, authorities say
Six strawberry brands linked to needle contamination across east coast, authorities say Strawberry contamination prompts $100,000 reward in search for culprit
5 votes -
Double Shipping
5 votes -
Feature Idea - Notify users when a comment which they had interacted with is edited.
Mockup - see the top item. I would love to be notified when a comment which I had interacted with has been edited. I have seen it mentioned by others a while back as well. My suggested...
Mockup - see the top item.
I would love to be notified when a comment which I had interacted with has been edited. I have seen it mentioned by others a while back as well. My suggested implementation is a pretty minor UI change.
On https://tildes.net/notifications/unread there would be an additional listing type which begins with "Comment was edited on "
Any comment which the current user has replied to, or has upvoted, and has been edited would appear here.
I am experimenting with a simple survey below using comments, please upvote the one that best reflects your view. Of course, also feel free to discuss anything further in a normal comment, just trying to keep things organized.
22 votes -
Reddit's bot ecosystem - Any good lessons for features on Tildes?
I may be one of the least qualified people here to discuss this topic, but I find two reddit bots pretty useful: https://www.reddit.com/user/autotldr...
I may be one of the least qualified people here to discuss this topic, but I find two reddit bots pretty useful:
https://www.reddit.com/user/autotldr
https://www.reddit.com/user/alternate-source-bot (this is my recent favorite)
What do you all think features like the two above being integrated into Tildes in some fashion, via bot or otherwise? Are there any other bot behaviors that you like which would have a good impact here, or are bots that produce comments the scourge of Reddit?
Sorry if this has been discussed before, if so let me know and I will delete this topic.
22 votes -
For any given product, why is the iOS client often the best client?
Background: I was deciding what to do since we use Atlassian’s Stride and it will be sunsetted. For us, the options are Teams or Slack. I’m going to give Teams a try since we already pay for it....
Background:
I was deciding what to do since we use Atlassian’s Stride and it will be sunsetted. For us, the options are Teams or Slack. I’m going to give Teams a try since we already pay for it. Someone I know also happens to be a PM there. I texted him “wow, Teams iOS has a 4.7 rating in the App Store!” He said, yes, it’s probably our best client. It made me realize that this is very often the case. The iOS client is often the best client for many services.Questions:
Do you all find this to be true as well?If so, why do you think this is? iOS itself? iOS app guidelines? iOS devs are more product minded? Android device fragmentation?
Any and all thoughts appreciated.
note: I am mobile OS agnostic, I use them all (both) regularly.
12 votes -
Parabola raises $2.2 million to bring the power of coding to non-technical people
3 votes