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43 votes
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Design for the web without Figma
7 votes -
Will AI really make graphic designers obsolete?
15 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 -
Is it time to do away with “good taste?”
8 votes -
Typography 2024: For America! For America’s best
7 votes -
Why is everything so ugly? The mid in fake midcentury modern.
26 votes -
What our utensils say about our culture
7 votes -
Gallery of physical visualizations
5 votes -
The icon sets proposed in the icon contest
8 votes -
Design notes on the 2023 Wikipedia redesign
9 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 -
Adam Savage's advice for pricing freelance work
6 votes -
Infrastructure that looks like science fiction (photos)
21 votes -
The UGHZ Principle
6 votes -
The age of average
8 votes -
A gallery of Sony product design going back decades
5 votes -
The olympic pictograms are miniature design masterpieces
9 votes -
How the inventor of the troll doll missed out on a fortune
5 votes -
Wikipedia has spent years on a barely noticeable redesign
18 votes -
Arne Aksel: ‘Denmark had become this decorative no-go land. We've been in a white or gray or beige box for what – 20, 25 years? I think people have had enough.’
5 votes -
Inside one of Japan's tiniest houses
6 votes -
Design collective Andra Formen has created furniture from electric scooters fished out of the canals of Malmö
4 votes -
King Charles III's new cypher is a design classic
14 votes -
Making of mathematical instruments - transforming a public domain book into a website
14 votes -
On writing better error messages
6 votes -
How mushrooms are turned into bacon and styrofoam | World Wide Waste
10 votes -
Designing accessible color systems
5 votes -
How “dementia villages” work
6 votes -
Velocipedia - Bicycles based on people’s attempts to draw them from memory
16 votes -
Is the open-plan office heading to the grave?
5 votes -
How OXO conquered the American kitchen
18 votes -
Art, fashion, and the French Revolution
5 votes -
Occlusion Grotesque. An experimental, organic typeface
27 votes -
Casino design and why there are no ninety degree turns in most casinos
4 votes -
The great design of the Dutch government
4 votes -
What if phones were actually designed for hands?
9 votes -
Lessons from a can opener: The obscurity of the "Safety Can Opener"
14 votes -
Vintage IKEA! A 1960s armchair just sold for £12k – here are ten other surprising secondhand Swedish hits
4 votes -
LockPickingLawyer keynote at Saintcon
15 votes -
Possibly the worst user interface I've seen all year
This is a webpage for a courier company. This screengrab is the whole page as served to me. If I want to track my parcel I have to enter the details into the pretend phone on the right and pretend...
This is a webpage for a courier company. This screengrab is the whole page as served to me. If I want to track my parcel I have to enter the details into the pretend phone on the right and pretend to use it like a phone, complete with tiny screen and fiddly controls.
I get that they would like me to install their app but this is almost offensively user-hostile design, and pretty much ensures I'll never install anything of the sort. I might consider installing the app of a company who deliver to me regularly and have a good track record of being good at their jobs, if that app offers useful functionality which can't be offered via a web page - but even that's unlikely. But these guys who I have never heard of until today and are pulling this nonsense? No way.
29 votes -
Neuomorphism — A passing fad or is it here to stay?
12 votes -
Recommend me a version control system for design assets (primarily Photoshop & Illustrator)
I'm a software developer working with a small team, and our Google Drive folder tree of UI assets/illustrations/app icons/etc. is becoming increasingly difficult to deal with. Aside from proper...
I'm a software developer working with a small team, and our Google Drive folder tree of UI assets/illustrations/app icons/etc. is becoming increasingly difficult to deal with. Aside from proper versioning, symlinks would be a major plus. Both are kinda-sorta possible with GDrive, but not in a reliable way.
I'm happy to take on a reasonable amount of management myself, although the easier it is for the designers themselves to work with the software, the better. Paid solutions are fine, although open source would be preferable (even as a hosted service) to avoid vendor lock-in down the line.
My instinct is to go with git/GitHub on the basis that we're already deeply familiar with it from the dev side, the GitHub desktop app isn't too onerous for non-techies, and we're already paying for it. That said, I'd be very interested in anyone's real-world experience of git for multiple gigs of 10-200MB binary files. I've heard that it's not especially well suited, although that might be out of date knowledge?
Beyond that, I'm open to almost anything. I'm kind of surprised that I haven't been able to find a single "gold standard" piece of software here, in the way that git is for developers, but maybe I haven't been searching well enough? Any pointers in the right direction or stories of what has/hasn't worked for your teams would be a huge help!
17 votes -
Nissin to sell a fork specially designed for its cup ramen
17 votes -
Typography on the web
3 votes -
IKEA goes glam rock with Zandra Rhodes collaboration – British fashion designer teams up with Swedish furniture chain after being inspired by lockdown
3 votes -
Linear Clock: Solar - a looser experience of time
6 votes -
Sucks to be him! How Henry the vacuum cleaner became an accidental design icon.
10 votes -
Mastering the basics of icon design
5 votes -
Discord celebrates six years, changes logo and font
25 votes