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7 votes
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Some of the best book covers of 2020
7 votes -
The secret history of the conversation chair
8 votes -
A lorem ipsum generator to commemorate the things from 2020 we’d probably like to forget
10 votes -
Wooden buildings that won’t burn
5 votes -
Furniture giant IKEA has announced it will stop printing its traditional catalogue, one of the world's biggest annual publications, after seventy years
10 votes -
The Scottish village where the children design the Christmas lights
9 votes -
The case against single family zoning
7 votes -
Manufacturing a better foot | Running shoes
4 votes -
Japan's jimi ("mundane") Halloween costumes of 2020
18 votes -
How did Soviet planners design the Union's cities?
9 votes -
How wheelbarrows are made
9 votes -
Architectural Design Patterns
8 votes -
How to design flowcharts, explained using flowcharts
7 votes -
Buildings and residents testament to the rich seams of history and identity of Kiruna in Sweden are ousted in favour of the profit-laden iron ore seams lurking beneath
2 votes -
Website design trends you’ll want to know about and try in 2020 and beyond
6 votes -
How Reykjavik's sheet-metal homes beat the Icelandic winter – they may be unorthodox, but the innovative buildings have kept residents warm and dry for more than a century
13 votes -
What are some examples of good administrative/management UI design to use for inspiration?
tl;dr What applications (web or desktop) have you seen that have excellent, productive user interfaces that prioritize getting shit done? I am currently developing a moderately complex web...
tl;dr What applications (web or desktop) have you seen that have excellent, productive user interfaces that prioritize getting shit done?
I am currently developing a moderately complex web application with a management interface that will be used by non-technical users. It also has a separate interface for technicians to see their tasks and submit reports, but I'm pretty happy with how that's coming together. I have a pretty good idea of how I want to display data in terms of what kind of "widgets" I could use. For example, a calendar view with daily, weekly, and monthly view modes. What I'm looking for inspiration with are the finer details, like filtering data, navigation, data hierarchy. I want to find things I hadn't even considered and aren't part of the typical "flat web UI toolkit" playbook.
I'd love to steal small ideas from a forgotten tool built for Windows 95, or maybe those paradigms are best left in the past—I don't know. Personally, I find most flat UI applications are almost useless in terms of discoverability, productivity, and general ease of use. Something like the Azure dashboard is what I would like to avoid building.
I'm also trying to keep my front end stack pretty lean by using Vue.js and rolling my own components based on accessible and keyboard navigable HTML components.
9 votes -
Why we don't like our underground house
11 votes -
Emily Ratajkowski - Owning my image
26 votes -
History of graphic design at US Open tennis tournament
8 votes -
Designers and technologists look to the natural world to envision more resilient futures
4 votes -
Winners of the 2021 Japan Packaging Design Awards
11 votes -
Spectacular new step-bridge floats over Norwegian waterfall Vøringsfossen – the project, designed by architect Carl-Viggo Hølmebakk, has been over a decade in the making
10 votes -
The history of electoral ballot design
5 votes -
Transparent public toilets unveiled in Tokyo parks — but they also offer privacy
8 votes -
The Tokyo Toilet - Public toilets in seventeen locations in Shibuya will be given unique redesigns by renowned designers and architects
11 votes -
Sweatpants forever
13 votes -
Denmark’s 300-year-old homes of the future – thatched with a seaweed that has the potential to be a contemporary building material
6 votes -
The science of user experience: How to use cognitive science in modern software development
3 votes -
Amid protests, Norway's government has begun tearing down a landmark building adorned with giant murals by Pablo Picasso
5 votes -
Make me think! - Commentary on UX design
10 votes -
The Codeless Code, Case #66: Porpoise
2 votes -
Solarpunk: Post-industrial design and aesthetics
5 votes -
The comeback of fun in the visual design of macOS
13 votes -
Finland's air force quietly drops swastika symbol – the air force has been using a swastika ever since it was founded in 1918, shortly after the country became independent
13 votes -
How the coronavirus could reshape architecture
6 votes -
How Cooper Black became pop culture’s favorite font
5 votes -
Death and surrender to power in the clothing of men
10 votes -
Flat UI elements attract less attention and cause uncertainty
6 votes -
Death of a typeface
13 votes -
Why the Golden Gate Bridge sounds like a David Lynch movie now
10 votes -
Utrecht: Planning for people and bikes, not for cars
11 votes -
The design of the “Incalculable Loss” front page of The New York Times for Memorial Day, 2020
14 votes -
Coronagrifting: A phenomenon of cheap mockups of COVID-related design "solutions"
7 votes -
The Cooper Hewitt Digital Collection
7 votes -
Paris has a plan to keep cars out after lockdown
20 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 -
What life indoors looks like in Tokyo’s cramped homes
8 votes