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18 votes
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Exposed: Slum photography was at the heart of progressive campaigns against urban poverty. And it was a weapon against poor people.
5 votes -
A movement known as Architectural Uprising is pushing back against Scandinavian design trends – and sometimes forcing architects back to the drawing board
25 votes -
To build a more lethal force, the Marine Corps needs a font for the 21st century
14 votes -
Finding meaning in Christopher Alexander's "The Nature of Order"
4 votes -
This building nearly broke Taipei. The Taipei Performing Arts Center; Over budget, a decade under construction, and one of Asia's most important cultural buildings.
18 votes -
If we want a shift to walking, we need to prioritize dignity
103 votes -
The bewildering architecture of skybridges
4 votes -
Treemaps are awesome!
10 votes -
New York City announces major public space and transit improvements for Downtown Brooklyn
17 votes -
The Death and Life of Great American Cities
12 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 -
Barbie Pink: What do Mattel’s rights in the valuable color look like?
7 votes -
Cleveland: New city policy would eliminate mandatory parking near transit corridors
12 votes -
‘They found ways to do the impossible’: Hipgnosis, the designers who changed the record sleeve for ever
8 votes -
Parking laws are strangling America
49 votes -
Escher Lizard flooring project
I like a bit of M.C. Escher art, and I was looking for some Escher images when I stumbled across this old blog post by someone who designed and made his own Escher-inspired floor tiles....
I like a bit of M.C. Escher art, and I was looking for some Escher images when I stumbled across this old blog post by someone who designed and made his own Escher-inspired floor tiles. Fascinating stuff!
Here's the main page, showing a photo of the finished floor: https://danceswithferrets.org/geekblog/?page_id=911
Then there's 8 blog entries, showing the steps he went through from initial idea to finished product.
As a bonus, here's a simple guide I found, which explains how Escher designed & made his tiles: http://static1.squarespace.com/static/5754f47fcf80a16bffa02c45/t/57c6b680f7e0abc8f6ac6993/1472640669212/Escher-tiling-instructions.pdf
It's so simple when you know how! But there's obviously still some artistry involved in deciding what shapes to cut & paste.
9 votes -
Every flashing element on your site alienates and enrages users
43 votes -
So you want to turn an office building into a home?
41 votes -
A quick look into Microsoft Offices's new default font
40 votes -
Meet Microsoft Office’s new default font: Aptos
43 votes -
Who really wants megastructure cites?
3 votes -
What’s your type? Try these tests to pick the perfect font for you.
18 votes -
In Moorhead, a rare opportunity to hit reset button on entire downtown
16 votes -
Architects trying to make Denmark carbon-neutral – Copenhagen hosts 2023 World Congress of Architects, displaying experimental structures that could decarbonise housing
9 votes -
Design for the web without Figma
7 votes -
Urban development company Atrium Ljungberg has unveiled plans to construct the world's largest wooden neighbourhood in Stockholm
10 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 -
The long, incredibly tortuous, and fascinating process of creating a Chinese font
22 votes -
Typography 2024: For America! For America’s best
7 votes -
Buzludzha was the pinnacle of Bulgaria’s communist-era monuments and drew international visitors as a modern ruin. Now, it’s poised to be the country’s first monument presented like a museum.
10 votes -
Doomsday prep for the super-rich
21 votes -
Why is everything so ugly? The mid in fake midcentury modern
26 votes -
How viral memes conquered piñata design
1 vote -
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 -
Where did all the tween fashion go?
10 votes -
Intricate tunnels of termite mounds could be key to energy efficient buildings
5 votes -
The secret world of Japan's puzzle masters
3 votes -
Design notes on the 2023 Wikipedia redesign
9 votes -
A peer reviewed paper on walkable neighbourhoods finds that walkability improves residents' happiness
9 votes -
Cities aren't loud: Cars are loud
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 -
Adam Savage's advice for pricing freelance work
6 votes -
Infrastructure that looks like science fiction (photos)
21 votes -
Munger Hall: A billionaire's bizarre social experiment
4 votes -
Designing for colorblindness
3 votes