We’ve been quietly crafting exceptional digital experiences, driving business growth, and helping products find their market fit. But we’ve missed the vibrant energy of the design community.
Now we’re excited to finally be here and connect with inspiring minds 🙌
We’ve been quietly crafting exceptional digital experiences, driving business growth, and helping products find their market fit. But we’ve missed the vibrant energy of the design community.
Now we’re excited to finally be here and connect with inspiring minds 🙌
Designing a POS interface is like trying to make a pizza 🍕: you have to balance the right ingredients. Find out how to approach ergonomics, power users vs. newbies, and customization in this comprehensive article written by our design team.
Designing a POS interface is like trying to make a pizza 🍕: you have to balance the right ingredients. Find out how to approach ergonomics, power users vs. newbies, and customization in this comprehensive article written by our design team.
It’s about making sure people get value from your product without frustration. If they struggle, they bounce. Not sure brand following can successfully counterbalance that.
February 6, 2025 at 1:05 PM
It’s about making sure people get value from your product without frustration. If they struggle, they bounce. Not sure brand following can successfully counterbalance that.
Wow, talk about missed potential. It looks like a zoomed in Excel sheet. With the right UX, it could elevate both staff efficiency and patient satisfaction.
February 6, 2025 at 11:21 AM
Wow, talk about missed potential. It looks like a zoomed in Excel sheet. With the right UX, it could elevate both staff efficiency and patient satisfaction.
In a true co-design process, developers should absolutely be part of the conversation from the start. It shouldn’t just be a ‘here’s what the UX person and users came up with’ scenario. When devs are included early, you get better collaboration and a design that’s actually feasible and scalable.
February 6, 2025 at 11:18 AM
In a true co-design process, developers should absolutely be part of the conversation from the start. It shouldn’t just be a ‘here’s what the UX person and users came up with’ scenario. When devs are included early, you get better collaboration and a design that’s actually feasible and scalable.
It’s all about making the experience intuitive and seamless, so users can focus on their goals, not on figuring out how to use your tool. When that happens, you've earned loyalty.
February 6, 2025 at 11:13 AM
It’s all about making the experience intuitive and seamless, so users can focus on their goals, not on figuring out how to use your tool. When that happens, you've earned loyalty.
Firefox on Windows is typically designed to remember the last session’s window state. On Linux Firefox doesn’t always retain that window state unless it’s specifically configured to do so, or there’s a workaround in the window manager’s settings.
February 6, 2025 at 11:08 AM
Firefox on Windows is typically designed to remember the last session’s window state. On Linux Firefox doesn’t always retain that window state unless it’s specifically configured to do so, or there’s a workaround in the window manager’s settings.
Not to mention that the UX deliverables I've seen AI create so far look like a toddler's busy board. Why is the world so keen on taking out the human in HCI?
February 6, 2025 at 11:01 AM
Not to mention that the UX deliverables I've seen AI create so far look like a toddler's busy board. Why is the world so keen on taking out the human in HCI?
In agile teams, yes. It’s a great way to get hands-on with problem-solving while still working within the team’s goals. I bet your input on that sign-in screen will be valued.
February 6, 2025 at 10:57 AM
In agile teams, yes. It’s a great way to get hands-on with problem-solving while still working within the team’s goals. I bet your input on that sign-in screen will be valued.
A confusing UI usually comes from years of design without a solid UX foundation. Focusing on clarity, consistency and usability will make things work more smoothly. After all, It's about improving the user experience.
A confusing UI usually comes from years of design without a solid UX foundation. Focusing on clarity, consistency and usability will make things work more smoothly. After all, It's about improving the user experience.
For now, real-time personalization means subtle content prioritization, dynamic caching strategies, or preloading relevant data based on user intent. It doesn’t have to be an erratic, ever-changing UI nightmare. But yeah, if done poorly, it could absolutely be a disaster.
February 2, 2025 at 9:36 AM
For now, real-time personalization means subtle content prioritization, dynamic caching strategies, or preloading relevant data based on user intent. It doesn’t have to be an erratic, ever-changing UI nightmare. But yeah, if done poorly, it could absolutely be a disaster.
Daily UI is a challenge-based platform that sends you 100 unique design prompts over 100 days to sharpen your skills, build your portfolio, and get creative. Perfect for anyone looking to improve and maybe even have a little fun along the way! Who’s up for the challenge?
Daily UI is a challenge-based platform that sends you 100 unique design prompts over 100 days to sharpen your skills, build your portfolio, and get creative. Perfect for anyone looking to improve and maybe even have a little fun along the way! Who’s up for the challenge?
Wearing all the hats and still feeling like you're barely scratching the surface. When things feel slow, I find it helps to focus on small wins, whether it's a design tweak that clicks or even just crossing something off your to-do list.
January 31, 2025 at 11:41 AM
Wearing all the hats and still feeling like you're barely scratching the surface. When things feel slow, I find it helps to focus on small wins, whether it's a design tweak that clicks or even just crossing something off your to-do list.
The comic is hilarious. Whether it's a button animation, a color change, or a subtle loading spinner, giving users immediate acknowledgment lets them know things are happening. It reduces anxiety and builds trust.
January 31, 2025 at 11:22 AM
The comic is hilarious. Whether it's a button animation, a color change, or a subtle loading spinner, giving users immediate acknowledgment lets them know things are happening. It reduces anxiety and builds trust.
I’d go with the "Next" button appearing in an inactive state and then switching to active once the criteria is met. This reassures users, but clearly communicates that they’re not quite ready to move on yet. It also avoids the frustration of wondering if they've missed something.
January 31, 2025 at 11:14 AM
I’d go with the "Next" button appearing in an inactive state and then switching to active once the criteria is met. This reassures users, but clearly communicates that they’re not quite ready to move on yet. It also avoids the frustration of wondering if they've missed something.