PODCAST · arts
The Feed & The Thread
by Chicago Camps
The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
132
The Feed & The Thread - May 13, 2026
We challenge the assumption that minimalism equals good design, exploring Adi Leviim’s argument that blank AI states drive churn and Jim Lewis and Jeff Sauro’s method for benchmarking usability without historical data. By weaving these insights with community debates on the invisible value of UX and the limits of AI efficiency, we examine how to measure success when the slate is empty. This episode asks whether we are stripping away necessary guidance in the name of simplicity, and how to articulate the cognitive load we remove before it becomes invisible. From The Feed How to Interpret a Rating Scale Without Historical Data (Jim Lewis, PhD and Jeff Sauro, PhD) — Set usability benchmarks at 70% of the range to account for negative skew in rating scales. The death of the empty state in AI products (Adi Leviim) — Blank prompt boxes cause high churn by forcing users to invent starting points instead of providing templates. Font Faces: Nick Shinn (John Boardley) — Highlighting personal nuances in type design demystifies the creative process and emphasizes the human element of craft. From The Thread It all comes down to Claude now... (r/UXDesign) — AI tools like Claude enable companies to maintain output with fewer staff, prioritizing efficiency over empathy. When someone that is not in our industry asks you what you do for work, what's your elevator spiel? (r/UXDesign) — Designers must articulate the cognitive load they remove, as invisibility makes their value seem nonexistent. Career change to UX design and feeling overwhelmed (r/UXDesign) — AI integration speed creates tension between learning traditional tools and jumping straight into vibe coding. Today's Notable Articles Exploring the HTML-in-Canvas Proposal — Vittorio Retrivi Rethinking design with your hands in the AI world — Darren Yeo Soon We Can Finally Banish JavaScript to the ShadowRealm — Mat Marquis Today Intercom becomes Fin — Eoghan McCabe Today's Notable Discussions Has anyone taken courses at UX Content Collective? — r/uxwriting How Detailed Should a UX/UI Case Study Be for Junior Roles? — r/UI_Design will the AI linear chatbot UI survive? — r/UI_Design Incoming UXR interns here is some help! — r/UXResearch Is this management style normal? — r/UXDesign Team member with no visual design experience - how to up skill? — r/UI_Design Which option for these chip pills, subtle or darker border? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
131
The Feed & The Thread - May 12, 2026
Today we explore Fabricio Teixeira argues this curated newsletter from ux collective critiques the current state of ai interfaces, arguing that relying on text pr, [email protected] argues luke wroblewski argues that generating mockups was never the difficult part of design; the true challenge lies in mainta, and juliahansen argues rosenfeld media has announced new sessions for its third annual 'designing with ai' conference, highlighting the rapid e. We also dive into community debates on Nobody told me how much UX depends on other people doing their job well too and unpaid design exercises - where's the actual line between screening and free labour. From The Feed New sessions added to the Designing with AI 2026 program (juliahansen) — Rosenfeld Media addresses design-engineering friction and vibe coding constraints in their updated conference program. How I use AI to partner on design problems (Suleiman Shakir) — Suleiman Shakir advocates for AI systems that hold project context, allowing designers to focus on high-level reasoning. The thinking was never just mine (Giorgio Schirò) — Giorgio Schirò argues AI accelerates existing cognitive loops, revealing that human thinking has always extended into tools. From The Thread I’m starting to think users don’t actually remember how they use products (r/UserExperience) — Self-reported user narratives often contradict behavioral data, requiring mixed methods for accurate insights. Voice of the User: "Pure Qual Is Cooked. The Market Did Not Ask How You Feel About It". Critiques or thoughts? (r/UXResearch) — The community rejects doomer narratives, affirming that mixed methods remain essential for understanding complex human behavior. Today's Notable Articles Prompt is not interface, UI patterns that won’t survive, how to make Claude follow your design… — Fabricio Teixeira Mockups Were Never the Hard Part — [email protected] The newest term in the AI lexicon is "interpassivity" — Pavel Samsonov Today's Notable Discussions Nobody told me how much UX depends on other people doing their job well too — r/UXDesign unpaid design exercises - where's the actual line between screening and free labour — r/UXDesign What is the difference between Staff level and Senior level when it comes to product/ux design roles? — r/UXDesign Just wanted to share my experience from the hiring side of Upwork — r/UXDesign Designing for 'Digital Friction': How to create a social experience that intentionally slows users down? (Seeking Feedback) — r/UXDesign Anyone at Learners Week 2026? — r/UXResearch This is how you handle design exercises in a hiring process — r/UXDesign I’ve spent 3 months interviewing for a UXR role just to be told they don’t want a UXR after all…. — r/UXResearch About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
130
The Feed & The Thread - May 11, 2026
We explore whether AI’s speed is liberating us for deeper discovery or drowning us in unvalidated noise, as Gale Robins and Jeff Gothelf warn that productivity gains without strategic focus are just accelerating the status quo. While Roman Pichler argues for strict strategic guardrails to cut through the chaos, our community threads reveal a growing crisis where fragmented attention and AI-driven execution are eroding the designer’s ability to question the problem itself. From The Feed The Product Strategy Framework: A Revised Guide for Product Leaders (Roman Pichler) — Strategy acts as guardrails to define what matters, preventing speed from becoming chaos. Discovery is the work AI gives back (Gale Robins) — Using AI to ask the same questions faster accelerates the status quo rather than creating innovation. Customer development has an AI problem. (Jeff Gothelf) — AI compresses timelines and floods teams with variants, making judgment the new bottleneck. From The Thread Design is treated as execution (r/UXDesign) — When designers only execute pre-approved AI flows, they lose the ability to question the problem itself. People forget important things during doctor appointments -curious how others would approach this UX-wise (r/UXResearch) — Healthcare UX fails to reduce cognitive load for stressed patients trying to reconstruct context from scattered notes. I miss when i could fully focus on one problem for more than 30 minutes (r/UXDesign) — Modern workdays fragment attention, trading creative depth for perceived busyness. Having trouble getting client approval on new product ideas (r/UXDesign) — Clients reject static wireframes unless designers lead with ROI and demonstrate tangible revenue impact. Anyone else feel like AI/vibe coding is making them skip important design fundamentals? (r/UI_Design) — Relying on AI for speed creates professional stagnation because juniors cannot critique output without basics. Today's Notable Articles Why Keyboard Users Can’t Scroll Your Overflow Containers — Godstime Aburu Le:mma Studio: Building the Feeling Behind the Screen — Artemii Lebedev Checklist for Creating Effective Claude Code Skills — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions sucked for the first 2 months — r/UXDesign Portfolio Review — r/UXDesign Please help me decide! 🙏 — r/hci Counterpoint to my PMs awful solutions they "validated" with stupid claude slop — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
129
The Feed & The Thread - May 10, 2026
We explore the widening gap between AI’s promise to handle basic tasks and the reality that agents still struggle with user autonomy and trust, drawing on Nielsen Norman Group’s findings on Qwen and Nicole Alexandra Michaelis’s “genie” framework. In The Thread, we confront the community’s growing fatigue as designers feel pressured to become pseudo-developers, sacrificing deep empathy for technical busywork while AI fails to alleviate the true drain of stakeholder coordination. From The Feed Everything I know about AI, I learned from a genie (Nicole Alexandra Michaelis) — LLMs are constrained by guardrails, cannot manufacture truth, and often bend rules to please users. Designing AI Agents: 4 Lessons from China’s Qwen Agent (Feifei Liu, Maria Rosala) — AI agents fail basic tasks by prioritizing user pleasure over execution, creating a trust deficit. Today's Notable Articles Using CSS corner-shape For Folded Corners — Daniel Schwarz What is DESIGN.md and How To Use It — Nick Babich The left-handed rope — HIROSHI SATO Pinning is not saving. Saving is not favoriting. Favoriting is not flagging. — Raoul Flaminzeanu Today's Notable Discussions Experienced job hunting, portfolio/case study/resume questions and review — 05/10/26 — r/UXDesign I feel like I suck, dunno know what to do — r/UXDesign Tool to help prep for whiteboard challenges — r/UXDesign I didn’t expect UX to feel this mentally exhausting sometimes — r/UXDesign Breaking into UX/early career: job hunting, how-tos/education/work review — 05/10/26 — r/UXDesign AI ethics — r/UXDesign Web app design — r/UI_Design Best remote eye-tracking software for complex enterprise UX research? — r/UXDesign Future UI/UX designers, where are you? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
128
The Feed & The Thread - May 9, 2026
We explore whether the shift from direct manipulation to text-based prompts is a regression in interaction design, weighing Joshua Leigh’s critique against Anna Kaley’s call for plain-language clarity. As we navigate this tension, we ask what we lose when we trade human judgment for automated output and whether our industry is forgetting the nuanced advocacy that defines our roles. From The Feed How we turned support into a revenue engine at Intercom (Franka Martinovic) — AI efficiency gains can fund deeper human connection and consultative customer engagement. The prompt is not an interface (Joshua Leigh) — Text prompts regress interaction design by forcing users to translate visual intent into abstract commands. UX Writing: FAQs from Practitioners (Anna Kaley) — Designers prefer nuanced human guidance over AI, requiring plain language for scanning users. From The Thread how to keep UX research notes in Notion without losing the thread? (r/UserExperience) — Automated synthesis speeds up work but risks losing the human judgment that structures evidence. Config Social idea? Honest yapping about the future of UX (r/UXDesign) — The industry is losing the language for nuanced advocacy in favor of simple UI tasks. How do you think UX should handle “proof” of user work vs just descriptions of experience? (r/UserExperience) — Standardized data links offer proof over persuasion, demanding signal strength behind decisions. Today's Notable Articles Spicy Chicken w/ Brad Frost | Wireframe Live — Brad Frost Making Zigzag CSS Layouts With a Grid + Transform Trick — Durgesh Rajubhai Pawar Users own the present. You own the future. — Alex Dapunt Today's Notable Discussions What is we doingggg? — r/UXDesign How did you know UXR was the right career for you? — r/UXResearch UX research career suggestion — r/UXResearch UX case study — r/UserExperience I'm looking for some advice — r/UXResearch About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
127
The Feed & The Thread - May 8, 2026
We explore whether AI is breaking our design systems or revealing where our frameworks are too rigid, looking at Sen Lin’s enforcement layers for Claude Code and Dan Brown’s use of AI as an information architecture laboratory. Then, we untangle the messy reality of design value, from the frustration of underpaid senior roles to the debate over whether polished interfaces actually move the business needle. It’s a look at how we balance structural integrity with market expectations when the tools and the paychecks don’t always align. From The Feed How to make Claude Code follow your design system in Figma (Sen Lin) — Lin adds an enforcement layer to bind AI actions to design governance and preserve structural integrity. A Scrollytelling Gift for Mum on Mother’s Day 2026 (Lee Meyer) — Meyer uses scroll-snap to mimic pattern-finding, showing how UI can hold memory and meaning. From The Thread Figma alternative for ad production? (r/UI_Design) — High-volume ad workflows are inefficient data entry, requiring systems to handle grunt work for strategic focus. Please select your allergies from the list (of every allergy) (r/UXDesign) — Dumping raw, unfiltered data onto users is not UX but a cautionary tale of bad design. Stood up and ghosted by this recruiter today (r/UXDesign) — The market demands elite strategic thinking from designers but refuses to pay for it, treating them as disposable. Solo Designer vs. a Fast Dev. Why Am I Always the Bottleneck? (r/UXDesign) — Designers must prioritize value over polished interfaces that do not move the business needle. Today's Notable Articles Designing data-intensive applications — advice for interaction designers — Thomas Sutton Announcing Fin for Ecommerce: Fin’s next role as a Customer Agent — Robert Davitt Building outcome-based pricing for Fin for Sales — Aisling O'Reilly Today's Notable Discussions How should I present my role in a UX class team project when I handled most of the research and testing? — r/UXResearch How do designers build confidence contributing in fast-moving design discussions? — r/UXDesign Taste ASSurance — r/UXDesign Sole designer trying to navigate AI-assisted design systems — what's actually possible with Claude Code/Design + Figma? — r/UXDesign I’ve been iterating on my rule builder UI but would like feedback — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
126
The Feed & The Thread - May 7, 2026
We explore how our shift toward hyper-individualism and centralized control creates the very isolation we then fail to solve, drawing on Patrizia Bertini’s critique of engagement metrics and Geoff Graham’s warning about Google’s coercive browser infrastructure. By contrasting these systemic pressures with Durgesh Pawar’s local-first architecture and community reflections on professional burnout, we ask whether we can redesign both our tools and our expectations to reclaim user agency and mental focus. From The Feed We built this. Now we own it. (Patrizia Bertini) — Shifting from collective well-being to hyper-individualism creates the anomie that systems fail to solve. Google’s Prompt API (Geoff Graham) — Google forces Gemini Nano onto users, blurring the line between tool and gatekeeper through mandatory consent. The Architecture Of Local-First Web Development ([email protected] (Durgesh Pawar)) — Local-first architecture prioritizes user ownership and speed by making the client the primary data copy. From The Thread I think a lot of junior designers underestimate how exhausting context-switching is (r/UXDesign) — Senior designers protect focus time via timeboxing to mitigate the mental health toll of multitasking. Not much impact (r/UXDesign) — Senior designers feel stifled by incompetent developers, revealing a tension between financial security and professional impact. Today's Notable Articles The trick to designing agentic AI is learning how to think like a manager — Kai Wong Vibe Coding Makes You a Bad Designer — Nick Babich St. Augustine and AI’s false promise — Michael Buckley Today's Notable Discussions How can I make these two screens stand out? — r/UI_Design Maintaining design system in your startup if you're only the designer - ui ux — r/UI_Design Periodicals recommendations? — r/UXResearch What would be best for GIS SaaS product? Freelancer or Design House? — r/UI_Design Struggling to position my portfolio for a fintech/OTC platform interview ( Junior Product design role) — r/UXDesign AI design and prototyping tools that use actual DS code library — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
125
The Feed & The Thread - May 6, 2026
Today we explore Dan Brown argues dan brown argues that product information architecture (ia) is not just about naming content categories, but about desig, Scott Berkun argues scott berkun argues that designers often feel undervalued or lost, but they possess unique 'superpowers' that are critic, and Saransh Sharma argues saransh sharma shares a highly refined, end-to-end prompt template designed to accelerate the product design process fro. We also dive into community debates on Those of you who have left tech, where did you go? and How could I improve the design of this page?. Today's Notable Articles Claude is an information architecture laboratory (Spilling Ink #15) — Dan Brown Revive your design superpowers — Scott Berkun Designed a prompt end-to-end for the design process and it will make you faster — Saransh Sharma Rethinking The Experience Of System Tools — [email protected] (Kyrylo Levashov) Why you need to protect your work more than ever — Marc Andrew From Shader Uniforms to Clip-Path Wipes: How GSAP Drives My Portfolio — Thibault Guignand Design Futures Assembly — [email protected] The illiterate organization — Pavel Samsonov Can AI Detect Usability Problems Like Researchers? — Jim Lewis, PhD • Jeff Sauro • Will Schiavone, PhD • Lucas Plabst, PhD Today's Notable Discussions Those of you who have left tech, where did you go? — r/UXResearch How could I improve the design of this page? — r/UI_Design Seeking resources for deep UX theoretical foundations — r/UXDesign UX Designers training AI models… what do you make of it? — r/UXDesign Help me filter out the noise: how to increase earning potential and sort out next steps in 2026 — r/UXDesign Need Advice for Title | Product Manager - Design / Sr. Product Designer / Product Manager / Product Architect — r/UXDesign What does your handoff process look like in the AI era? — r/UXDesign Is this normal in the Australian design job market or am I doing something wrong? — r/UXDesign UX UI Designer Group — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
124
The Feed & The Thread - May 5, 2026
We explore the widening gap between controlled design systems and chaotic reality, examining Leslie Sultani’s warning that human oversight of AI often creates a false sense of safety rather than true accountability. We also dissect the fragility of rigid UI patterns like fixed-height cards and the cultural weight of reviving ornate typography, while questioning whether high-density interfaces serve experts or alienate novices. Ultimately, we ask if we are building for genuine flexibility or just optimizing for the illusion of control. From The Feed When AI decides and human signs off (Leslie Sultani) — High-stakes AI shifts liability to humans while keeping credit, violating the contract that systems should provide evidence. Steven Heller’s Font of the Month: Puffery (John Boardley) — Reviving Blackletter styles highlights how type choices carry cultural weight and historical statements beyond mere aesthetics. Fixed-Height Cards: More Fragile Than They Look (Kevine Nzapdi) — Rigid containers break under real-world content variations, proving flexibility beats visual perfection in UX. From The Thread I built a free AI mock interview app for UX/Product designers — real FAANG questions, voice answers, AI scoring. Would love feedback. (r/UXDesign) — AI scoring tools often fail by providing numbers without actionable reasoning, creating a gap between score and insight. What do designers have to do long-term in a company? (r/UXDesign) — UX value shifts from initial launches to ongoing iteration, where small changes drive retention rather than big reveals. I built a Desktop GUI for Linux containers (React/Tauri). Looking for UI/UX roasts and tips! (r/UI_Design) — High-density interfaces sacrifice clarity for speed, forcing a choice between expert metrics and novice guidance. Looking for cohorts (r/UXResearch) — Forming cohorts to test AI platforms with scalable taxonomies brings rigorous structure to a chaotic landscape of buzzwords. Today's Notable Articles The psychological fine print of AI — Dora Czerna Reverse-Engineering Claude AI’s Mascot Animations with SVG and GSAP — Ayotomiwa Wale-Durojaye Today's Notable Discussions Question for Aspiring and Current Videogame UX / Game User Research PhD students — r/UXResearch Roast my landing page — r/UI_Design Reducing friction in icon workflows inside Figma (looking for UX feedback) — r/UXDesign Experimenting with different style directions for a premium wealth investment app. Any feedback or thoughts greatly appreciated — r/UXDesign AI UX - text based or agentic — r/UserExperience Best paid alternatives to ADPList for portfolio mentorship and tailored design career direction? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
123
The Feed & The Thread - May 4, 2026
We explore why our drive for efficiency is eroding trust, from Catherine Chu’s finding that users reject AI dating coaching for feeling dishonest to the structural failure of AI chat histories that bury critical context. We also untangle community debates on whether simplicity is mistaken for laziness and if probabilistic design systems threaten the accessibility we rely on. This episode asks if we are trading genuine connection and craftsmanship for algorithmic convenience. From The Feed Can AI make your dating life better? (Catherine Chu) — Users reject AI dating tools because algorithmic convenience feels dishonest and erodes trust in genuine connection. Akaru: Crafting Precision-Driven Digital Experiences (Akaru) — Automation sacrifices the intentional craftsmanship and nuance that define true design excellence. The forgotten conversation problem in AI chat (Adi Leviim) — Indexing only titles ignores valuable dialogue content, creating a fundamental flaw in knowledge work. From The Thread Why customer journey mapping in powerpoint doesnt work (r/UXDesign) — Static PowerPoint layouts waste time on formatting, causing designers to blame tools instead of solving problems. Design system debate: probabilistic vs. deterministic (r/UXDesign) — Deterministic systems offer necessary stability, while probabilistic AI introduces risky uncertainty. Sometimes the hardest part of UX is not overthinking (r/UXDesign) — Simplicity is often mistaken for laziness, causing designers to bury clarity under unnecessary complexity. UXR Portfolio (r/UXResearch) — The industry demands proof of competence but blocks entry by undervaluing hypothetical case studies for new researchers. Today's Notable Articles Finally, the Handoff is Dead — [email protected] Why these UXers left tech for greener pastures — juliahansen Three Habits That Beat AI Tool Fluency — Jeff Gothelf Today's Notable Discussions How do you fix colour contrast issues without breaking brand colours? — r/UI_Design Lazy Registration, or how I learned to understand my users — r/UserExperience Hotjar/Medallia survey button gets in the way of users... ideas? — r/UserExperience feedback on the onboarding flow for my ios speaking coach app — r/UI_Design How do you stop important content from getting buried on a page? — r/UXResearch Free UX books [pickup in San Francisco] — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
122
The Feed & The Thread - May 3, 2026
We explore the tension between bolting AI onto legacy interfaces versus rethinking products from the ground up, weighing Revanth Krishna’s call for intent-based design against Nick Babich’s critique of AI’s structural flaws. In the Thread, we navigate the psychological pitfalls of gamification rewards and the need for emotional restraint in sensitive apps, while questioning whether brutalist aesthetics can ever build the trust users need. From The Feed Don’t simply bolt on AI. Rethink from the ground up. (Revanth Krishna) — Shift from command inputs to intent-based outcomes by rethinking product architecture. Claude Design: Good, Bad, and Ugly (Nick Babich) — AI aids early ideation but fails at professional-grade design due to poor layout logic. Designing Against the Gallery: A Two-Year Journey to a Layered Portfolio Experience (Artem Shcherban) — Portfolios should prioritize storytelling over static visual displays. From The Thread What’s the best way to handle unused rewards in a productivity app? (r/UI_Design) — Gamification must balance fairness with momentum to avoid feeling manipulative. I'm redesigning my website and was wondering how this color palette looks? (r/UI_Design) — Aesthetic choices must align with brand strategy and user emotion, not just style. Today's Notable Articles The basketball playbook for AI builder teams — Patrick Neeman Troubleshooting Claude Code Skills — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions Need some critiques! — r/UI_Design I built a healthcare price transparency tool and would love UX feedback — r/UXDesign Why UX copy writing is needed — r/UXDesign First HCI RA position, how to make the most out of it? — r/UXResearch Which micro-interaction feels more "natural"? (Slide vs Pop) — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
121
The Feed & The Thread - May 2, 2026
We explore why optimizing for easy metrics like interface polish often masks foundational flaws in research rigor and ethical alignment. Drawing on Raluca Budiu’s warning that bad data is expensive and Zeeshan Khalid’s distinction between usability and accessibility, we argue that high scores can’t fix exclusion or invalid participant selection. The conversation extends to the community’s shift from AI hype to practical utility, highlighting how documenting pushback against dark patterns matters more than iterative tweaks when business goals contradict user trust. From The Feed A Fresh View In May (2026 Wallpapers Edition) ([email protected] (Cosima Mielke)) — Fresh visual perspectives reset attention and spark inspiration during long workdays. Selection Criteria: How to Pick Your Participants (Raluca Budiu, Therese Fessenden) — Skipping deep selection criteria destroys validity, resulting in inconclusive noise. Usability, accessibility, and the human-AI paradigm (Zeeshan Khalid) — Accessibility is a prerequisite; usability scores can mask total exclusion. From The Thread Where does AI actually fit in your UX workflow (beyond hype)? (r/UXDesign) — AI automates tedious documentation to free up focus for actual constraints. Looking for feedback on a wireframe build for a learning app/game (r/UI_Design) — Navigation labels must match user mental models to avoid semantic disconnects. Is the best UX really the one users don’t notice? (r/UXDesign) — Design-literate users notice when invisible design hides complexity rather than simplifying it. I’m getting impostor syndrome (r/UXDesign) — Research rigor means nothing if business goals contradict user trust through dark patterns. Today's Notable Articles Information Seeking in China: A Different Ecosystem, Familiar Behavior — Feifei Liu, Maria Rosala Thoughtful AI Implementation for UXR Leaders — Ashlee Edwards, Ph.D. What’s !important #10: HTML-in-Canvas, Hex Maps, E-ink Optimization, and More — Daniel Schwarz Today's Notable Discussions How do you handle the “production work” vs actual design thinking in UX? — r/UXDesign I built an interactive food planning and logging widget — r/UI_Design High craft, low empathy — r/UXDesign Portfolio Review Requests — r/UI_Design How to make the screen content scroll without scrolling the nav. bar in Figma? — r/UI_Design What can I improve with the UI? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
120
The Feed & The Thread - May 1, 2026
We explore why speed is creating a new kind of friction where interfaces fight users, examining Joas Pambou’s call for stable streaming controls and Theresa-Marie Rhyne’s warning that GenAI fails at the math of accessibility. As the WebAIM report reveals a systemic tolerance for exclusion, we also navigate the community’s anxiety over AI’s true value and the disconnect between design headcount and actual impact. From The Feed A GenAI perplexed by color theory (Theresa-Marie Rhyne) — AI generates aesthetically pleasing colors that fail accessibility math, proving it is poor for verification. Designing Stable Interfaces For Streaming Content ([email protected] (Joas Pambou)) — Aggressive auto-scrolling and layout shifts create friction by prioritizing system speed over user control. Designing Stable Interfaces For Streaming Content ([email protected] (Joas Pambou)) — Aggressive auto-scrolling and layout shifts create friction by prioritizing system speed over user control. Tolerating Inaccessibility (Christopher Phillips) — Rising web barriers reflect a systemic tolerance for exclusion rather than a technical failure. From The Thread Has the skeuomorphic UI style really fallen out of favor? (r/UI_Design) — Skeuomorphism struggles against flat design because users prioritize speed and control over nostalgic aesthetics. What makes a great mentee? (r/UXDesign) — Seeking mentorship to navigate burnout and politics is a strategic move, not a sign of weakness. Success stories about AI? (r/UXDesign) — AI is valuable for synthesizing notes and writing scripts, but anxiety stems from the value added on top of the tool. feedback about my minimalist idea (r/UI_Design) — Minimalist task managers offer necessary breathing room in a cluttered market where less can be more. Today's Notable Articles The Importance of Native Randomness in CSS — Alvaro Montoro Today's Notable Discussions PM “Requirements” — r/UXDesign What depressed me about the state of practice today — r/UXDesign User Experience in Real Estate: Why Buyers Need Clarity, Not More Options — r/UXDesign Inspiration/Training for Designing Enterprise Apps — r/UXDesign Portfolio & Design Critique — May 2026 — r/UserExperience What tools do you use for translating UI/UX content? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
119
The Feed & The Thread - April 30, 2026
We explore whether the design industry’s recent struggles stem from a false sense of security during the boom years, or if we’ve simply failed to translate our work into strategic value. Eric Shumake argues for shifting from pixel-pushing to risk reduction in healthcare, while Gabriel Shoyombo and Joseph Santamaria demonstrate how technical precision and narrative structure elevate design beyond visual spectacle. Meanwhile, we confront the ethical lines of unpaid labor and toxic cultures, asking if a job offer is truly a safety net or just a contract of mutual respect. From The Feed What is AI really costing the planet? (Dora Czerna) — The script mentions the environmental cost of AI but provides no specific argument or insight. contrast() (Gabriel Shoyombo) — CSS contrast functions allow programmatic manipulation of dynamic range to ensure readability without manual color adjustments. Last week in the Rosenverse: UX in healthcare & measuring success (juliahansen) — Healthcare UX requires translating findings into leadership language like risk reduction to gain strategic influence. AI and Design System (Nick Babich) — The script mentions AI in design systems but provides no specific argument or insight. Claude Code Best Practices (Nick Babich) — The script mentions Claude Code practices but provides no specific argument or insight. More Than a Portfolio: Building a Scroll-Driven 3D World with Something to Say (Joseph Santamaria) — Technical choices in portfolios must serve narrative and emotional resonance rather than just visual spectacle. From The Thread Do you guys feel like developers and designers are taking this harder than other professions because we had it too good lately? (r/UXDesign) — Low barriers to entry created a false sense of security, forcing a correction toward solving real problems efficiently. Design exercise before a principle level role (r/UXDesign) — Senior designers are refusing unpaid interview exercises, highlighting a shift in power dynamics and professional worth. How do you influence product as a UXR? (r/UXResearch) — Research insights must be translated into narrative structure and embedded into the product lifecycle to drive action. I’m gonna be fired on Friday. (r/UXDesign) — A toxic environment that meets neurodivergence with hostility demonstrates that a job offer is a contract of mutual respect. Today's Notable Discussions Hero section for website for an alternative investment fund — r/UI_Design Let's discuss technical skills needed for UI designer for future with Ai — r/UI_Design My personal game backlog manager — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
118
The Feed & The Thread - April 29, 2026
We are grappling with a critical tension: as Taras Bakusevych argues that legacy UI patterns are crumbling under AI's ability to infer intent, Jim Lewis warns that these same models remain dangerously unreliable for spotting actual usability issues. While Pascaline Albin suggests AI agents could drive new revenue streams, our community is already feeling the strain of developers shipping "vibe-coded" garbage that forces designers into a reactive janitor role. Today, we question whether we are truly solving user problems or just racing to keep up with tools that are moving faster than our ability to govern them. From The Feed How Reliable Is AI at Finding UI Problems? (Jim Lewis, PhD • Jeff Sauro • Will Schiavone, PhD • Lucas Plabst, PhD) — AI reliability for finding UI issues swings wildly based on prompt phrasing and temperature settings. AI is the answer to the sales growth-without-headcount problem (Pascaline Albin) — AI agents must have their own targets to prove their worth as a distinct revenue source. 10 UI patterns that won’t survive the AI shift (Taras Bakusevych) — Legacy patterns like wizards are obsolete because AI can now infer user intent via ambient context. From The Thread Right now, my company 🙃 (r/UXDesign) — A satirical image highlights the growing gap between professional standards and corporate chaos in design. How do you showcase motion and interaction? (r/UXDesign) — The industry now expects cinematic presentations alongside functional problem-solving. Ideas for design vocabulary library (r/UI_Design) — Practitioners lack the precise terminology to replicate visual trends via prompting, creating a major bottleneck. Streaming services that don’t alphabetize “The …” correctly (r/UserExperience) — Persistent information architecture breakdowns force users to hunt for content under the wrong letter. Today's Notable Articles Breaking Down Barriers: How HCI Can Transform Accessibility in Computing Education — David Santandreu CalongeLinda SmailMelody Sylvain Beyond Participation: Building a Black Community Advisory Board for Computing Research Collaborations — Jay L. Cunningham The interface that responds — Pedro A. Brêtas Between Human and Machine: Sofia Papadopoulou’s Approach to Augmented Creativity — Sofia Papadopoulou Today's Notable Discussions exploring event-driven UI for system stats (mac concept) — r/UI_Design Does this dark theme palette work? — r/UI_Design Best UX/UIskill for Claude code? Impeccable vs ux/ui pro max vs others — r/UXDesign Discovered any new research methods with AI? — r/UXResearch Trading symbol dashboard — r/UI_Design AI and Burnout — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
117
The Feed & The Thread - April 28, 2026
When AI makes building effortless, we face a paradox where the real risk isn't shipping too slow, but shipping the wrong thing too fast. We explore how Marty Cagan argues that discovery remains our only differentiator, while Casey Hudetz and Eric Olive warn that chasing a "bug-free" workforce might actually erode the trust built through informal collaboration. From the community's struggles with preemptive wireframes to the exhaustion of reactive design, we question whether we are losing the perceived value of human discovery in favor of fast output. From The Feed Technology, Joy, and Justice Through the Delightful Encounter (Ian RobsonNic Whitton) — True human-centered design must move beyond usability metrics to create genuine delight and serve social good. Build To Learn FAQ (Marty Cagan) — While AI lowers barriers to entry, teams must resist shipping faster and instead double down on rigorous discovery to find real user needs. The “Bug-Free” Workforce: How AI Efficiency Is Subtly Disrupting The Interactions That Build Strong Teams ([email protected] (Casey Hudetz and Eric Olive)) — AI tools that eliminate the need to ask for help kill the informal chats that build trust and increase coordination failures. From The Thread What’s one simple desktop task that still feels way more annoying than it should? (r/UI_Design) — Tiny friction points like accidental file overwrites matter because they are exact spots where AI tools struggle to add real value without deep context. Founder finally assigned me (intern) a design task to do after my current task. Team lead already started and did a lot without me. What should I do? (r/UXDesign) — Even when handed a finished blueprint, a designer's job remains to validate the destination rather than just executing high-fidelity polish. What does it take to be a competent UI/UX designer nowadays? (r/UI_Design) — The industry fears that speed is replacing depth, making the ability to know what to build harder than the ability to build it. Today's Notable Articles def state_of_computational_arts(): return current_state — Miriam Sturdee Rhumb Studio: Small but Mighty, Shaped by Curiosity — Rhumb Studio Today's Notable Discussions UXR refresher courses — r/UXResearch Designers who got laid off, what was work actually like before it happened? — r/UXDesign For those whose teams are increasingly using non-Figma AI tools for design, how are you doing the "final polish" or "copy fit and finish" phase of the design process? — r/UXDesign Did I spend years building something too complex to be user-friendly? I’d really appreciate honest critique. — r/UXDesign Looking for perspectives on navigating career as a UX designer — r/UXDesign anyone else worried about AI layoffs in UX? — r/UXResearch About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
116
The Feed & The Thread - April 27, 2026
We explore the tension between constant AI assistance and the actual user experience, asking whether intelligence should always be visible or if uninvited help degrades our flow. Drawing on Bradly Zavakos's framework for mapping AI presence to intent and Julie Zhuo's challenge to the stigma of admitting we don't know, we question how much we should perform versus simply be. From the friction of muscle-memory workflows to the exhaustion of maintaining an inauthentic persona, we discuss how to lead effectively without being physically present in every room. From The Feed How design leaders influence decisions without being in the room (Kai Wong) — Detailed annotations allow designs to speak for themselves, freeing leaders to focus on strategy. The right touch: mapping AI presence to user intent (Bradly Zavakos) — Uninvited generative AI harms workflow flow, requiring a framework to match help levels to user needs. I am an idiot (Julie Zhuo) — Admitting personal shortcomings reveals that the world functions marvelously despite individual flaws and fears of rejection. From The Thread After trying Miro and FigJam for remote brainstorming, here’s what actually worked for our team (r/UXDesign) — FigJam excels at quick idea dumping while Miro handles complex structuring better. UX Exercise: Gameflow Launcher (r/UI_Design) — UI inconsistencies become glaringly obvious and unforgiving when the interaction model shifts from mouse to controller. Tried explaining a process to a freelancer and realized I don’t even understand it myself (r/UXDesign) — Relying on muscle memory creates a dangerous gap between doing work and understanding it. Being in this industry feels like constantly betraying myself (r/UXDesign) — Designers feel exhausted by the pressure to perform an inauthentic, bubbly persona. Would love to have this filter irl (r/UXDesign) — Feeds dominated by repetitive AI arguments degrade the actual experience of staying informed. Today's Notable Articles Building Healthy Community with Ben Callahan — Brad Frost Designing for privacy in a surveillance age with Robert Stribley — juliahansen What If We Prompted AI for Outcomes Instead of Outputs? — Jeff Gothelf Today's Notable Discussions I don't think adding gradients to an icon is radical — r/UI_Design Elsevier opinions — r/UXResearch Roast my app design — r/UI_Design My immense frustration with the hiring process — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
115
The Feed & The Thread - April 26, 2026
We're drowning in features and AI speed, yet the real challenge today is finding the discipline to remove what doesn't matter. We explore Luis Hermosilla's argument for strategic subtraction and Jeff Gothelf's warning that AI lacks the memory of past failures that gives human opinions real value. While we debate the cost of feature creep, we also confront the silence of unemployed designers and the desperate scramble for new career maps as execution roles face obsolescence. From The Feed The art of subtraction in a world of infinite features (Luis Hermosilla) — Removing non-essential parts creates the clarity users need by countering feature dilution. Strong opinions, loosely held — and what that means in the age of AI (Jeff Gothelf) — AI lacks the memory of past failures that gives human opinions real value. What we behold, the trust-latency gap, designing haptics (Fabricio Teixeira) — Speed breaks trust and consensus, proving AI agents cannot replace human collaboration. From The Thread Breaking into UX/early career: job hunting, how-tos/education/work review — 04/26/26 (r/UXDesign) — Anonymous threads reveal desperation for honest feedback as old career ladders disappear. Experienced job hunting, portfolio/case study/resume questions and review — 04/26/26 (r/UXDesign) — Strict anonymity guidelines show professionals scrambling for a new map in a collapsing field. Unashamed to admit I’m looking for a way out (r/UXDesign) — Financial instability forces designers to leave a broken system rather than endure eroding savings. Where are top designers/developers actually moving in the AI era? (Real strategic shifts, not just upskilling) (r/UXDesign) — Pure execution roles face obsolescence as talent shifts toward product strategy and audience building. Today's Notable Articles Vibe Coding Myths Debunked — Nick Babich The Death of Digital Product Design — Nick Babich GPT 5.5 vs Opus 4.7: Which AI Model Is Best for Product Design? — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions How do I get an apple intelligence like outline on my icon — r/UI_Design Notetaking app with carryover and advanced features — r/UXDesign How do you structure your product UX research findings? — r/UXResearch UX/UI redesign for Reddit in iOS — r/UI_Design [Critique] App Store screenshots — reworked from scratch, looking for honest feedback — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
114
The Feed & The Thread - April 25, 2026
We explore the tension between building smarter AI bots and the user's feeling of shouting into a void, asking if our interfaces truly acknowledge where people actually are. While experts like Georgia Kenderova and Luke W. argue for clearer capability signals and goal-oriented design, our community debates whether we've become glorified janitors cleaning up products built without empathy. As developers fear replacement by AI-generated apps, we question if rigorous documentation is the missing key to collaboration or if financial engineering is making user empathy the first casualty. From The Feed The rulebook for designing AI experiences (Dora Czerna) — High-stakes AI work requires concrete patterns to manage interaction lifecycles and ensure appropriate user reliance. Susurrus: Crafting a Cozy Watercolor World with Three.js and Shaders (Xianyao Wei) — Codrops explores creating watercolor shaders for digital environments. Podcast: Agents, Interfaces, and More ([email protected]) — Designing for goals users accomplish without thinking creates tension between transparency and clean results. Why User Panels Fail (Lola Famulegun) — Nielsen Norman Group investigates the reasons behind the failure of user panels. 10 Guidelines for Designing Your Site’s AI Chatbots (Georgia Kenderova, Maria Rosala, Tanner Kohler) — Bots must clearly state capabilities and offer prompt suggestions to avoid user frustration. From The Thread Shit companies to avoid working for (r/UXDesign) — Private equity ownership structures often turn workplaces into health hazards by prioritizing financial engineering over empathy. Starting a new position soon - what is advice you would have given yourself on Day 1! (r/UXResearch) — The shadow of job loss changes how professionals approach their first day even in dream roles. Personal Story: I started vide coding and the devs get scared (r/UXDesign) — Rigorous documentation is the missing key to effective AI collaboration when tools generate flawless apps. [Rant] Are we just glorified janitors now? (r/UXDesign) — Designers and developers feel reduced to cleaning up products built without design input as AI accelerates the build phase. Feedback on Dashboard UI design (r/UI_Design) — Designers are attempting to balance feature richness with simplicity to reduce fatigue for indie developers. Today's Notable Discussions Multiple disciplines portfolio - how to display? — r/UI_Design Side vs Top Navigation For Learning App — r/UXDesign Looking for a UI/UX book that’s actually useful and visually interesting — r/UXDesign Went through 5+ rounds at a B2B SaaS company. Here's what they extracted from me as a designer. — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
113
The Feed & The Thread - April 24, 2026
When speed becomes our only metric, we risk outsourcing our critical thinking to the very tools meant to help us. Today, we explore Heenesh Patel's argument for using Socratic dialogue to challenge weak AI ideas and Alan Dalton's proposal that bad design is often a memory failure rather than malice. We also dive into community debates on whether flashy interactions solve real problems and how the rush to ship is making us forget how to do the work ourselves. From The Feed Introducing the Sales Agent Blueprint (Ciaran Nolan) — AI agents handle initial lead qualification so humans can focus on high-value consultative interactions. Good designers, bad websites: a proposal (by Alan Dalton) — Bad design stems from human memory failures rather than malice, requiring recognition over recall. Designing with AI without losing your mind (Heenesh Patel) — The Thia tool uses Socratic dialogue to challenge weak ideas and shift focus from instant output to scrutiny. From The Thread Design handoff belongs in the bin 🗑️ (r/UXDesign) — Treating design and engineering as a unified effort prevents artificial separation from hurting the final product. Is this interaction feels premium? (r/UI_Design) — Adding effects just because they are possible often distracts from solving real user problems. Today's Notable Articles What improv taught me about why innovation falls out of sync — Ian Batterbee Building 4WIDE: Turning Distortion, Blur, and Motion into a Coherent Experience — Tomoya Okada Recreating Apple’s Vision Pro Animation in CSS — John Rhea Today's Notable Discussions At what point does simplifying a UI start removing too much? — r/UI_Design Just a heads-up about Growing in Content 2026 — r/uxwriting Thoughts on UTM tags on portfolio links? — r/UXDesign Designed this Trading app interface. What do you think? — r/UI_Design Mural vs Miro vs Figma for UX wireframing which one to stick with in 2026? — r/UserExperience About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
112
The Feed & The Thread - April 23, 2026
As AI reshapes our workflows, we confront a critical tension: are we solving the right problems or simply diluting the expertise that defines our value? Today, we unpack Catherine Chu's warning about dignity in elderly care, Nick Babich's case for strict constraints in AI skills, and Carrie Webster's argument that "production-ready" code might trap us in average competence. We also dive into community fears that AI is shrinking the UX writing field and replacing genuine human critique with insufferable, algorithmic feedback. Join us as we decide whether these tools are superpowers or the very thing that exposes our frauds. From The Feed The UX Designer’s Nightmare: When “Production-Ready” Becomes A Design Deliverable ([email protected] (Carrie Webster)) — Relying on generated code drops comprehension by 17% and traps designers in debugging rather than system building. How AI may reshape elderly care (Catherine Chu) — Fear of mistakes blocks older adults from using tech, making true consent impossible when privacy policies are ungraspable. 7 Common Mistakes To Avoid When Creating Claude Skills (Nick Babich) — Vague instructions cause generic outputs, requiring strict constraints and robust examples to prevent tools from becoming distractions. From The Thread Start up to huge company - how to adjust expectations (r/UXDesign) — Shifting from fast turnarounds to slow, siloed corporate cycles creates chaos when workflows fail to adapt to scale. Is anybody else finding AI makes people insufferable? (r/UXDesign) — Treating AI as a shortcut replaces genuine human critique with algorithmic responses, losing the friction needed for real insight. Today's Notable Articles Using Design Systems in Claude Design: How Good Is It? — Nick Babich Charts = Tables — iA Inc Announcing Fin for Sales: A new role for Fin Customer Agent — Rati Zvirawa Working in the open — Aly Blenkin A Playful Clip Menu with GSAP’s easeReverse — Manoela Ilic Today's Notable Discussions Upskilling and trying to get better — r/uxwriting Earth Day Donation Slider Concept — r/UI_Design UK Content Designers! I’m curious about the salary ranges for our role. I’ve been seeing lots of jobs on LI lately with the listed pay being abysmally low. Would you mind sharing your pay range and seniority? — r/uxwriting Looking for advice on how to improve my design skills after years of only UXR work. — r/UserExperience What the hell is with Spotify on tablet — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
111
The Feed & The Thread - April 22, 2026
As AI tools collapse the walls between design and engineering, we ask whether we are truly ready to lead as primary business protagonists rather than secondary executors. While Kike Peña predicts a fantastic voyage into 2026, we weigh this against Jeff Sauro's caution that AI remains a research assistant, not a replacement for human judgment, and Dan Saffer's argument that machines still fail to define the right problems. We explore this tension through real community debates on abandoning Figma for code and the ethical dangers of manipulative design to determine if our shift toward stakeholder alignment is a sustainable evolution or a dangerous blur of strategy and execution. From The Feed Design fundamentals and AI disruption: Dan Saffer on Finding Our Way (Jesse James Garrett) — AI excels at building solutions but fails to define the right problems, making human fundamentals essential. AI is approving our pull requests: Here’s how we made it safe (Kesha Mykhailov) — Intercom implements AI safety protocols to manage risks within automated code review processes. Can AI Detect Usability Problems? (Jeff Sauro, PhD • Lucas Plabst, PhD • Jim Lewis, PhD • Will Schiavone, PhD) — AI can precisely describe user cursor movements but cannot replace human judgment as the final decision maker. Product design in 2026: the beginning of a fantastic voyage? (Kike Peña) — AI is collapsing the code wall, shifting designers from secondary execution roles to primary business protagonists. From The Thread Unethical mobile applications (r/UXDesign) — Multi-sensory cues like haptic and auditory feedback create strong psychological impacts that pose ethical dangers in manipulative design. Anyone here working at a firm that has adopted AI and want designers to touch the codebase? (r/UXDesign) — Companies are increasingly expecting designers to bridge the engineering gap using AI tools for direct code manipulation. Is UX becoming more about communication than design as you grow? (r/UXDesign) — Senior practitioners spend less time on UI creation and more on stakeholder alignment and gaining trust. Today's Notable Articles The chat box isn’t a UI paradigm. It’s what shipped. — Adi Leviim False Earth: From WebGL Limits to a WebGPU-Driven World — Ming Jyun Hung Today's Notable Discussions Let’s sift through the LI noise — r/UXDesign Deliberately confusing UI — r/UI_Design How accurate does this feel to you? — r/UXDesign Why HCI networking is so much into nepotism and alcoholism? — r/hci Freelance web designers, what's your process for collecting client feedback? — r/UI_Design I mapped the UX research tooling landscape into one list — r/UXDesign What are the top 5 plugins you are using in Figma? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
110
The Feed & The Thread - April 21, 2026
We confront the uncomfortable truth that the systems we built to optimize efficiency are now teaching AI to inherit and amplify the web's darkest deceptive patterns. From Arin Bhowmick's warning that prompting for conversions increases manipulation to Eleanor Hecks' critique of session timeouts that punish human pacing, we explore how our past shortcuts are becoming our future liabilities. We also untangle the community's growing anxiety over homogenized design and leadership traps where AI is used to bypass human judgment rather than assist it. Ultimately, we ask whether we can untrain these models before they make our work feel entirely disposable. From The Feed Session Timeouts: The Overlooked Accessibility Barrier In Authentication Design ([email protected] (Eleanor Hecks)) — Treating slow interaction as a security risk erases work for users with motor or cognitive disabilities. My UX Superpower: Nothing Works! (L. Jeffrey Zeldman) — Struggling with interfaces allows designers to spot false affordances and simulate novice confusion. The web trained AI to deceive. Now designers have to untrain it. (Arin Bhowmick) — AI models inherit deceptive design patterns from a web history saturated with manipulation. From The Thread Feels like we’re all designing the same UI lately (r/UXDesign) — Relying on shared design systems and AI tools bakes homogeneity directly into digital products. What helped you transition from Mid-level to Senior UI Designer? (r/UI_Design) — Moving beyond visual polish to manage vague requirements in complex industries defines senior roles. Today's Notable Articles Mouth Coding — Brad Frost How to mitigate the risk of AI implementation in enterprise environments — Matt Jedraszczyk “Business as Usual” Is a Terrible Name for Vital Work — Christina Markdown + Astro = ❤️ — Zell Liew Today's Notable Discussions Applied for one role but found better fits at the same company, how should I handle this? (I have my 1st interview) — r/UXResearch Evaluating smartlook competitors, what actually matters in this category? — r/UserExperience As a product designer, I feel like AI design content sucks Is anyone actually using Claude to design screens? — r/UXDesign Should I confront my tech lead? — r/UXDesign Which survey tool should we use for political survey? — r/UXResearch I’ve coasted for too Long as a UX designer and now I need a plan to catch up. Please help! All recommendations welcome. Courses, Youtube channels, good content creators etc — r/UXDesign Interesting Ad — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
109
The Feed & The Thread - April 20, 2026
We explore the dangerous tension where AI-generated fluency masks a lack of real expertise, asking if polished words are eroding our professional depth. Hoang Nguyen warns that smooth chat interfaces are reshaping how we describe work, while Christopher Noessel argues we must capture the full texture of decision-making through living transcripts rather than static documents. As the community debates whether leadership is shifting from craft to unblocking teams, we question if looking good is becoming table stakes while the thinking underneath falls apart. From The Feed RationaleBot: Why Design’s Near-Future Deliverable Is a Living Transcript (Christopher Noessel) — Queryable transcripts of AI pair-design sessions capture decision-making texture better than static documents. AI is ruining the way you talk about your work (Hoang Nguyen) — Prioritizing smooth flow over precise accuracy in AI chat interfaces causes fluency to be mistaken for professional competence. Interactive Storytelling for the Web: Building Immersive Stories with Timelines, 3D, and Layered Scenes (Bjørn Fjellstad) — Modern web tools enable designers to create cinematic, narrative-driven experiences without dedicated game engines. From The Thread Torn on switching to Product (r/UXResearch) — Moving to Product Management trades deep work for constant negotiation, meetings, and the burden of owning outcomes when engineering ignores you. Hot take: tools like Figma AI and Claude are making “good UI” too easy (r/UXDesign) — AI tools make polished visuals easy to achieve, often hiding shallow thinking and leaving broken states for engineers. Historically, has there ever been disruption or hype at this scale before in the design community? (r/UXDesign) — While the panic feels familiar to past shifts, the current speed of AI-driven change is unprecedented. Designing less, deciding more (r/UXDesign) — The core of design work is shifting from generation speed to filtering outputs and ensuring strategic alignment. Head of UX with weak design skills — is this normal? (r/UXDesign) — Leadership success is now defined by unblocking teams and strategic alignment rather than hands-on pixel crafting. Today's Notable Articles Design Was Never the Comps: What I learned when Claude Design dumped a dozen screens on me — Christopher Noessel The deceptive nature of today’s AI conversation design and how to fix it — Nicole Alexandra Michaelis Today's Notable Discussions Accordion view vs. new page — r/UXDesign ‘Netflix Ruined Its Apple TV App by Switching to a Custom Video Player’ — r/UXDesign I do not care about any of these vibe prompt-to-design tools — r/UXDesign My notes look organized but my thinking isn’t with collaborative wireframing — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
108
The Feed & The Thread - April 19, 2026
As our tools begin to build themselves, we confront the uncomfortable question of whether speed is hollowing out the mastery needed for future design leaders. We explore Darren Yeo's warning about the "permission tax" of skipping foundational steps and Sen Lin's framework for becoming an AI-native conductor rather than just a pixel placer. Meanwhile, community debates on r/UXDesign challenge us to decide if we are designing for truth or just clean charts when AI presents low-confidence data as absolute fact. Ultimately, we ask if optimizing for efficiency risks losing the essential reflection phase that makes design actually useful. From The Feed Rethinking the shape of design teams in an AI world (Darren Yeo) — Letting juniors skip foundational steps creates a costly permission tax and risks losing future leadership mastery. Designers, this is your guide to creating AI-powered products (juliahansen) — Treating AI as a fundamental material allows products to manifest on demand and dashboards to design themselves. Becoming an AI-native designer (Sen Lin) — Designers must shift from translators to conductors by externalizing tacit knowledge through context, components, and criteria. From The Thread Apple Health- Bad UX or Irresponsible UX? (r/UXDesign) — Presenting low-confidence data as absolute fact hides the messy reality of source data and prioritizes clean charts over truth. Using AI in UX feels fast at first but heavier later (r/UXDesign) — Optimizing for efficiency risks losing the reflection phase that makes design actually useful. Prompt-to-design (without the canvas) (r/UXDesign) — Bypassing the visual iteration phase produces inferior results where generation speed outpaces outcome quality. Best workflow to export icons with expanded stroke? (r/UI_Design) — Tedious re-configuration cycles reveal a tooling gap that forces designers to maintain files instead of designing. No idea how to handle this recorder tab UI (mobile) (r/UI_Design) — A layout lacking visual weight feels empty, requiring contrast adjustments rather than added features to fix the issue. For you, what we need to build a real agentic designer ? (r/UXDesign) — Autonomous systems handle functional design but fail to bridge the gap to human nuance. Today's Notable Articles The misrepresentation of “good taste” as a core design skill — Maria Taneva Test smart: how to approach AI and stay sane? — Julia Kocbek Are we makers by nature — or consumers by design? — Dora Czerna Today's Notable Discussions Claude Design feels like a shift but I am not sure where it fits yet — r/UXDesign Experienced job hunting, portfolio/case study/resume questions and review — 04/19/26 — r/UXDesign Breaking into UX/early career: job hunting, how-tos/education/work review — 04/19/26 — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
107
The Feed & The Thread - April 18, 2026
We explore the uncomfortable truth that while we obsess over making AI smarter, we are ignoring the human context that gives products their soul. From Gregory Muryn-Mukha's warning that code alone creates generic outputs to the Nielsen Norman Group's finding that users want direct answers over friendly chat, we question if our tools are truly ready for the real world. We also dive into community debates on whether AI-generated code is replacing design system teams and if new CSS tools can finally free us from complex JavaScript. Join us as we untangle the tension between rapid automation and the essential design decisions that define your product. From The Feed Your AI agent can read your codebase. It doesn’t know your product. (Gregory Muryn-Mukha) — Brand voice and interaction principles live in design files, not code repositories. What’s !important #9: clip-path Jigsaws, View Transitions Toolkit, Name-only Containers, and More (Daniel Schwarz) — New CSS tools like clip-path and subgrid solve layout problems without extra JavaScript. Less Chat, More Answer: Site AI Chatbots Need to Get to the Point (Maria Rosala, Georgia Kenderova, Tanner Kohler) — Users prefer scannable, direct answers over lengthy, friendly chatbot conversations. From The Thread Claude Design Release (r/UXDesign) — New AI design tools feel like standalone toys rather than seamless workflow extensions. HCI from ed-x by GT (r/hci) — Theoretical courses often fail to bridge the gap between mindset shifts and practical how-to skills. Claude Design: Usage Limits on Pro Plan (r/UXDesign) — Current AI design tools consume usage limits too quickly to be viable for daily work. Today's Notable Articles Folder instructions — Instructions for system-level AI — Karthikeya GS Boost Design Autonomy with an Information Pipeline — Sara Paul Today's Notable Discussions New to the field, I'm looking for guidance, can you help me ? — r/hci What tools are you always jumping between mid-design — r/UXDesign Getting back to work — r/UXDesign Advice on getting into a fintech product design / UX role — r/UXDesign i presented to the VP of product and forgot to explain half the design decisions. two months of work. — r/UXDesign tools I use for UX research, ranked — r/UXResearch Thoughts with some designer friends about AI — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
106
The Feed & The Thread - April 17, 2026
We question whether our systems can truly handle the messiness of reality when Peter Zakrzewski exposes AI's failure at spatial reasoning and Victor Amejimaobari argues that your module choice dictates your team's future. While Corentin Bernadou shows how sharing experimental failures deepens our motion design, we also confront the gap between high-fidelity visuals and the fragile interactions they often hide. From the tension of displaying dense legal data on tiny screens to the absurdity of AI-generated job descriptions still demanding Adobe XD, we explore if our tools are serving the user or just satisfying the builder. From The Feed Oh, but there’s one more thing (Peter (Zak) Zakrzewski) — AI fails at stable spatial reasoning because it lacks the embodied grounding required for true design practice. The Art of Complex Motion: Corentin Bernadou’s World of Shaders and Experimentation (Corentin Bernadou) — Sharing experimental shader failures accelerates skill acquisition and unlocks unique interaction possibilities. A Well-Designed JavaScript Module System is Your First Architecture Decision (Amejimaobari Victor) — Selecting a module system is a foundational architectural decision that shapes application boundaries and team structure. From The Thread Elegantly display clusters of grouped data in mobile app? (r/UI_Design) — Mobile screens force designers to prioritize information hierarchy over raw data volume to avoid visual clutter. 3d world map (r/UI_Design) — Chasing high-fidelity visuals often creates fragile systems that fail to handle real-world interaction effectively. I built a design tool to better handle responsive layouts. Would love feedback on whether this is solving a real UX problem. (r/UXDesign) — Custom tools must be evaluated to see if they solve real problems or merely patch broken workflows in mainstream software. A recruiter just asked for my Adobe XD experience. I had to pull up a 3-year-old Reddit post to make sure I wasn't losing my mind. (r/UXDesign) — AI-generated job descriptions are hallucinating outdated tool requirements because they fail to understand the current design landscape. working faster without overthinking (r/UXDesign) — Clients value functional solutions achieved through rapid prototyping far more than pixel-perfect perfection. Today's Notable Articles Autopilot, agentic AI, and the dangers of imperfect metaphors — Tom Seiple Build to Learn vs Build to Earn — Marty Cagan I watched the manosphere documentary; here is how design is making things worse. — Maria Teresa Stella Today's Notable Discussions Would ChatGPT be as disruptive if it wasn't producing a new output every time but was deterministic. The first time amaze experience on regenerate button? — r/UXDesign rupee pinching(swindling) racket — r/UXDesign The rupee pinching(swindling) racket — r/uxwriting I wanted a mood tracker that just tracked moods and made it really obvious and easy, as opposed to apps on the store that have 10,000 features. This UI is exactly what I envisioned, but it doesn't look "professional" to me. How can I improve this without abandoning "simple, easy, obvious"? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
105
The Feed & The Thread - April 16, 2026
We explore the unsettling tension between the tools meant to make our work easier and the ways they are quietly reshaping who we are as designers. From Chris Becker's warning that we "become what we behold" to the anxiety on Reddit about losing our strategic value to agentic workflows, we question if the industry is trading our humanity for speed. As we navigate a landscape where trust breaks in thirty seconds and portfolios must serve two different audiences, we ask whether these new efficiencies are truly supporting our growth or just turning us into another step in an assembly line. From The Feed We become what we behold (Chris R Becker) — Constant interaction with AI models alters how designers perceive user needs. The Future of UI Design is Agentic Design (uxplanet.org) — AI agents are shifting from passive assistants to active co-creators generating UIs. The trust gap in healthcare AI isn’t about the AI (Sibanu Bora) — Clinicians abandon tools if interfaces demand too many clicks before delivering value. From The Thread So many layoffs? (r/hci) — Current job cuts reveal a fear that economic instability outpaces personal ambitions in the field. What do staff level portfolios look like in the current job market? (r/UXDesign) — Portfolios must now serve both skimming recruiters and deep-diving hiring managers. How specifically does someone network in this industry? (r/UXDesign) — Optimizing digital workflows creates a gap that makes finding human connections increasingly difficult. Today's Notable Articles Figma Design System + Claude Code — Nick Babich AI, UX, and the factory model — Zeeshan Khalid The New Designer/Developer Collaboration — [email protected] Today's Notable Discussions The friction of saving inspiration might be defeating its own purpose, how do you handle this? — r/UXDesign Synthetic data and UX research — r/UserExperience Do mood-based filters actually work for decision-heavy UIs? — r/UI_Design Requesting feedback on a social website — r/UI_Design It’s “Org Design for Design Orgs” still relevant? — r/UXDesign Am I cooked? — r/UXDesign UI Feedback for club-project?? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
104
The Feed & The Thread - April 15, 2026
We explore the blurring line between showing your work and selling your output, asking if intent now matters more than polish as Julie Zhuo and Soleio Cuervo argue that world-class portfolios must reveal the messy texture of pain. As Roman Pichler proposes a new "Product Builder" role where managers must prototype alongside engineers, we also question whether synthetic users can truly replace the lived experience of real humans in research. Join us as we dissect these shifting definitions of ownership and the tension between executive speed and sustainable product thinking. From The Feed A Review of Experiments with Synthetic Users (Jim Lewis, PhD and Jeff Sauro, PhD) — Synthetic data lacks the lived experience needed for accurate user insights. How to Spot a World-Class Designer (Julie Zhuo) — World-class talent is defined by intent and showing the messy texture of work rather than just polished output. Should Product Managers be Product Builders? (Roman Pichler) — Product managers must now prototype and vibe-code alongside engineers using AI tools. They Call Me Giulio: The Making of a Cinematic Cyberpunk Portfolio (Giulio Collesei) — Cinematic portfolios are highlighted as a trend in design presentation. From The Thread Advice on transitioning from psychology? (r/UXResearch) — The field increasingly values rigorous data analysis and behavioral interpretation over traditional design portfolios. Would you consider this as 'dark design'? (r/UXDesign) — Hiding cancellation options is often viewed as data-driven prioritization rather than a deceptive pattern. I made this tool for Worldbuilding, I like how the UI looks, but I'm afraid the UX is bad. Any words of wisdom? (r/UI_Design) — Prioritizing visual polish before validating underlying utility creates a broken experience. The AI Great Leap Forward (r/UXDesign) — Executive mandates for AI speed risk replacing sustainable product thinking with engineering-led overreach. Job postings from my company (r/uxwriting) — New leadership roles require understanding the technical mechanics of AI generation, not just intent. Today's Notable Articles The hardest percentages — Pratik Bothra The Radio State Machine — Amit Sheen Today's Notable Discussions Maybe the best way to grow in UX is outside of UX — r/UXDesign Seeking feedback from anyone who has received medical lab results — clickable prototype of a health app that explains flagged results in plain language — r/UXResearch A lot of UX issues i deal with aren’t really design problems — r/UXDesign Why are so many logs written for machines instead of humans? — r/UXDesign What Can I Improve About My Website UX/UI Design? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
103
The Feed & The Thread - April 14, 2026
We explore the tension between the speed of modern tools and the necessity of slow, human thinking, asking what we should do with the time we save once speed becomes table stakes. Kevin O'Brien shows how to turn manual customer work into scalable features, while Scott Jenson argues that we must intentionally create negative space to critique AI outputs rather than just generating them. Meanwhile, our community debates whether the friction of building a portfolio from scratch is worth it or if the real win is simply publishing version one to start solving real problems. From The Feed The Ma of a New Machine (Scott Jenson) — Fast AI design tools require intentional pauses for human critique to ensure real problem-solving. From swarms to product: Turning customer signals into scalable features (Kevin O'Brien) — Manual customer work can evolve into native automation without needing data science. 7 View Transitions Recipes to Try (Sunkanmi Fafowora) — Smooth page transitions demand strict adherence to OS-level motion preferences for accessibility. From The Thread I would like to take up an online course to improve myself as a UX desinger and keep up with the current market. (r/UXDesign) — Designers face anxiety about balancing full-time work with the need for upskilling in an AI-driven market. In-app interviews vs scheduled calls? (r/UXResearch) — Conducting interviews inside the app captures insights while the user experience is still fresh. How do you actually map a full user journey in one wireframe without turning into a tool hopping lunatic trying to collaborate on prototypes (r/UserExperience) — Visualizing complex user journeys requires tools that provide clarity for stakeholders rather than creating chaotic sprawl. Feature based portfolio - not whole product / passion projects (r/UXDesign) — Portfolios are shifting from polished fictional products to showcasing real, gritty problem-solving work. Lowest friction way to get a portfolio website up (r/UXDesign) — Designers should prioritize publishing work quickly over the technical struggle of building a site from scratch. Today's Notable Articles Lusion: Where Digital Craft Meets Ambitious Experimentation — Lusion Steven Heller’s Font of the Month: Gilway Paradox — John Boardley Today's Notable Discussions Disabled vs Read Only Input States — r/UXDesign Do you think its better to be in design field with good level coding knowledge or be in development field with good level of design knowledge? — r/UXDesign Hiring: UX Content Strategist – AI Systems | Sunnyvale, CA (Hybrid) | Contract — r/uxwriting UW MCHI+D or USC IDBT for an early-career product designer? — r/hci About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
102
The Feed & The Thread - April 13, 2026
We explore the tension between velocity and trust, asking whether moving faster actually accelerates our uncertainty. While Jeff Gothelf warns that "vibe coding" without discovery leaves teams with a "now what" dilemma, Honey Mehta argues that deliberate slowness is essential for building confidence in high-stakes interactions. We also navigate the real-world friction of portfolio restrictions and color choices to see if we can find sustainable advantage by learning faster than our rivals. From The Feed Designing adaptive teams (Zeeshan Khalid) — Teams must shift from linear problem-solving to a biological, systemic view to recognize circular cause-and-effect relationships. The trust-latency gap: why the future of UX is intentionally slower (Honey Mehta) — Deliberate slowness in high-stakes interactions builds user confidence by countering the perception of carelessness. Vibe coding surfaces the questions. Product management answers them. (Jeff Gothelf) — Rapid prototyping without product discovery creates a "now what" dilemma that generates more work for later. From The Thread Is this mini bar chart confusing? (r/UI_Design) — Simplified data visualizations often lack necessary context like labels or scales, risking user interpretation if speed is prioritized over clarity. How do you build case study when company restricts file access? (r/UXDesign) — Protecting intellectual property by blocking file exports can accidentally hide the very work that proves a designer's value. Designers in Tech without formal degrees (r/UXDesign) — Real-world experience often outweighs formal credentials when securing jobs in a tight market. Today's Notable Articles 7 Rules for Creating an Effective Claude Code Skill — Nick Babich Claude Code for Creating Diagrams — Nick Babich Most products don’t need tone of voice — they need a point — Rita Kind-Envy Today's Notable Discussions First time at CHI! Anyone wanna hangout? — r/hci How are you incorporating AI into your workflows? — r/UXResearch tired of SurveyMonkey's free trial, it's honestly a joke — r/UXResearch Non-UI Designer mobile app design quandary — r/UI_Design Question about getting dark mode color palette input — r/UXResearch Which is easier on the eyes, cleaner, more premium? And if neither, what can I do to achieve this? — r/UI_Design To those who think UX writing is an afterthought — r/uxwriting About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
101
The Feed & The Thread - April 12, 2026
We question whether our critiques validate the designer or the work, exploring Filipe Nzongo's argument to separate the person from the design while Jeff Sauro and Jim Lewis warn us against misinterpreting confidence intervals as proof of specific results. As we navigate a community split between seasoned professionals and newcomers seeking validation, we also confront the danger of accepting AI-generated "coherent nonsense" just because it sounds professional. Today, we challenge ourselves to move beyond personal bias and statistical illusions to build a more honest, effective practice. From The Feed 10 Claude Code Tips & Tricks from Boris Cherny for Product Teams (Nick Babich) — Adopting creator-endorsed AI commands streamlines product workflows without relying on trial and error. Rethinking design critique (Filipe Nzongo) — Separating the designer from the design builds shared knowledge by framing feedback around user needs. Credible vs. Confidence Intervals: Different Meanings but Similar Decisions (Jeff Sauro, PhD • Jim Lewis, PhD) — Confidence intervals describe the method rather than the probability of a specific result. From The Thread Coding basics for designer recommendation (r/UXDesign) — The closing gap between designing and building makes coding skills essential for designer survival. How are you all dealing with product thinking slop and research slop? (r/UXDesign) — Teams must reject coherent nonsense from AI just because it sounds professional. Which of you freaks designed this? (r/UI_Design) — Critiquing baffling interfaces forces us to ask if we are validating bias against the unfamiliar. Experienced job hunting, portfolio/case study/resume questions and review — 04/12/26 (r/UXDesign) — Seasoned professionals seek to negotiate offers while hunting for validation in a demanding market. Breaking into UX/early career: job hunting, how-tos/education/work review — 04/12/26 (r/UXDesign) — Newcomers struggle to prove they belong in a field that rarely gives validation freely. Today's Notable Articles Storybook MCP with Dominic Nguyen — Brad Frost Top 3 Claude Code + Figma Workflows — Nick Babich Notes from the people building your future — Dora Czerna Today's Notable Discussions I think calling a client "bad" is one of the quickest labels people use in UX work. — r/UXDesign Where's the line between "simple and straightforward" and "lazy"? — r/UI_Design Designers turned into developers hows your life now after Ai growth and all noise? — r/UXDesign Pencil con roocode — r/UXDesign Is vibe coding your portfolio(your own idea) ethical as an aspiring ux designer ? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
100
The Feed & The Thread - April 11, 2026
We explore the tension between polished perfection and the human touch, asking if visible imperfection is the only way to signal trust in an era of AI fatigue. Megan Chan argues that handmade designs are our new trust signal, while Jeff Gothelf warns that rigid frameworks like SAFe are now catastrophic for shipping AI features. We also navigate the emotional weight of the current job market and the dangerous confidence users place in unreliable LLMs, questioning how we balance process with the need to over-deliver. From The Feed Handmade Designs: The New Trust Signal (Megan Chan) — Visible imperfections restore trust by signaling human care in an era of AI-generated perfection. SAFe Was Bad for Agility. For AI, It’s Catastrophic. (Jeff Gothelf) — Rigid planning cycles in SAFe block organizations from shipping AI features effectively. How To Improve UX In Legacy Systems ([email protected] (Vitaly Friedman)) — Successful legacy improvements require mapping hidden workflows rather than executing big-bang redesigns. From The Thread Do interviewers actually want low-fi when they say “wireframe or sketch”? (r/UXDesign) — Hiring managers value clarity on requirements, yet candidates feel pressured to over-deliver polish. Where do you look for part-time or contract work? (r/UXDesign) — Experienced designers are shifting away from traditional job boards to find fractional roles. What’s your UX view about inherent unreliability of LLMs? (r/UXDesign) — Users inevitably trust AI output without checking, creating a dangerous confidence gap that designs must address. The relief I felt.... 😭 (r/UXDesign) — The emotional weight of landing a job after months of ghosting highlights the human need for validation. Modal or Drawer? (r/UI_Design) — Modals are preferred for dense content because they center information and reduce the need to crane one's neck. Today's Notable Articles AI Agents as Users — Sarah Gibbons, Kate Moran The Exat Microsite: Pushing a Typography Showcase to New Creative Extremes — Studio Size Top 7 Claude Code Skills Repos for Product Designers — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions UXPA Boston Conference - May 8, 2026, Revere Hotel Boston — r/UXResearch Actual sentence from my boss — r/UXDesign How do I quickly gain trust in the first 1–3 months? — r/UXDesign My manager wants a 'Design-Led' culture, but wants me to be the enforcer without the authority. How do I handle this? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
99
The Feed & The Thread - April 10, 2026
We are navigating a field where the traditional boundaries of our roles are dissolving, forcing us to choose between the efficiency AI promises and the ethics we must uphold. As Dan Saffer argues that we are all doing the same job now, we also confront Marty Cagan's warning that internal tools suffer from a lack of empathy and Neel Dozome's critique of design principles weaponized against vulnerable users. From the fear that project management is safer than UX to the reality that AI tools often miss human nuance, we explore whether our careers depend on being faster or on being more responsible. From The Feed Commercial vs Internal Products (Marty Cagan) — Treating internal tools as afterthoughts reduces organizational efficiency because stakeholders cannot leave poor products. Social media on trial (Neel Dozome) — Infinite scrolling features are engineered to hijack developing brains, prioritizing profit over user well-being. We’re All Doing The Same Job Now (Dan Saffer) — AI dissolves traditional role boundaries, allowing product managers and engineers to perform each other's tasks. From The Thread Diary study + transcription tools that are actually good? (r/UXResearch) — AI transcription tools often miss half the data in large studies, risking products built on incomplete truths. UX Vs Project Management. Which will be killed by AI first? (r/hci) — The fear that AI will erase roles built on human empathy forces a choice between efficiency and ethics. 6 years in and still don't know how to properly start a project (r/UXDesign) — The real barrier to starting projects is a lack of mentorship on validating problems before designing. Today's Notable Articles Selecting a Date Range in CSS — Preethi Jimmy Carter was right — L. Jeffrey Zeldman Handwritten notes in the time of AI note takers — L. Jeffrey Zeldman taste.md — Pablo Stanley A Single DM, a First SOTD, and the Start of Chanh M. Ho’s Creative Journey — Chanh M. Ho Today's Notable Discussions requesting feedback/Help on UI/UX layout for my apps "Liked/saved" page — r/UI_Design Generative UI feels like the next ”voice will replace screens” am I wrong? — r/UXDesign Thoughts on this pronunciation snippet? — r/UI_Design Attempted to create a landing page and checkout screen - would love honest feedback — r/UI_Design Finding my way — r/UXResearch AI is making UX faster, but also a bit heavier in a weird way — r/UXDesign Found this while searching for inspiration. — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
98
The Feed & The Thread - April 9, 2026
We confront the uncomfortable truth that the systems we build to improve things often make them worse, starting with Dora Czerna's argument that human-centered design's blind spot for environmental cost turns user comfort into a driver of unnecessary consumption. As Julia Hansen and Jeff Gothelf reveal how rigid frameworks fail to create genuine value, we also navigate the messy reality of r/UXDesign where ageism and unchecked AI features threaten to swallow the very design work we strive to protect. This episode asks whether we can finally admit we are part of the problem before we can hope to fix it. From The Feed Beyond the user: why design needs to widen its circle (Dora Czerna) — Optimizing for user comfort ignores the devastating environmental cost of heavy interfaces. Why OKRs, agile, and their ilk fail with Jeff Gothelf (juliahansen) — Organizations fail by rewarding shipping outputs rather than creating genuine value. An update on life and work (Brad Frost) — Building a community of learners scales impact more effectively than laborious client consulting. From The Thread Ageism and the popularity of AI (r/UXDesign) — Experienced professionals face a perfect storm as AI rises and ageism collides in the market. Leadership team pushing AI-generated features to customers without UX-review? (r/UXDesign) — Systems built for efficiency are actively making products worse without proper review. Big company or small? Where are the safe jobs for designers? (r/UXDesign) — The real question is where genuine design work survives without being swallowed by bureaucracy. Today's Notable Articles Creating Custom Page Transitions in Astro with Barba.js and GSAP — Iqbal Muthahhary The old design workshop is dead. Long live design workshops. — Kai Wong Today's Notable Discussions Requesting Feedback UI/UX help for website project — r/UI_Design UX/UI Design — r/ScienceUX Job Search Reflection: My 8 Month Unemployment is Finally Over — r/UXDesign Community App Management — r/UXDesign Anyone have a UI testing automation workflow? — r/UXDesign When does a design challenge become a red flag? — r/UXDesign Frustrated with manager leaning towards "publicity" teammates — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
97
The Feed & The Thread - April 8, 2026
As the gap between static mockups and production code collapses, we ask whether designers must code again to stay intimate with their craft. Luke Wroblewski argues that AI agents are finally closing this distance, yet Fabricio Teixeira warns that executives' hunger for AI potential leaves individual contributors trapped in deterministic execution. We explore how to treat AI as a proactive partner rather than a command tool, while navigating the tension between feeling like we're building on shifting ground and the urgent need to define what a product isn't. From The Feed Should Designers "Code"? ([email protected]) — AI agents are closing the design-engineering gap, shifting workflows from abstract planning to building directly in production code. The UX ground is shaking, synthetic users, building perspective (Fabricio Teixeira) — Executives chase AI potential while individual contributors feel trapped in deterministic execution. Cowork Mode in Claude Code for Product Design Tasks (Nick Babich) — Treating AI as a proactive partner allows designers to offload repetitive tasks while maintaining control over concepts. From The Thread Would Appreciate Feedback/ Advice on my Y2K nostalgic radio player (r/UI_Design) — Embracing strange, human textures like Y2K aesthetics reminds us that design is about feeling, not just function. Confused about how to prepare Figma file for developer handoff properly (r/UXDesign) — Traditional static handoff workflows are becoming obsolete as the industry moves to building directly in the browser. Do you find yourself in an endless analysis loop when using an LLM? (r/UXResearch) — LLMs can slow work down by creating too many options, making the real skill knowing when to stop analyzing and decide. 4 years of experience but none of it feels 'legit' enough. What should I do? (r/UXDesign) — The tension between feeling fake and being qualified is imposter syndrome, but the fast-changing landscape means nobody has all the answers. Today's Notable Articles Who are we really designing for? — Daleen Rabe The Best Way To Plan Work With Claude Code — Nick Babich Alternatives to the !important Keyword — Saleh Mubashar Today's Notable Discussions Does forcing Google Sign-In (no skip option) hurt retention? — r/UXDesign What's the most interesting/strange UI design you've come across? I love these bubblegum/vaporwave windows from the 90s designs (unknown artists) — r/UI_Design It feels like UX work is more about avoiding mistakes than creating something new — r/UXDesign Company forcing AI use — r/UXDesign Do I just suck at this or... — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
96
The Feed & The Thread - April 7, 2026
We explore the critical shift from moving fast and breaking things to managing legal liability, as Andrés Zapata argues that deceptive interfaces are now actionable harm and Victor Yocco proposes the Decision Node Audit to balance AI transparency with user trust. As we dissect how designers are evolving into risk managers and trust architects, we also weigh the community's struggle between playful aesthetics and the hard requirements of radical transparency. Join us to see how technical rhythm and deep iteration are replacing pure visual flair as the new standard for a trustworthy digital presence. From The Feed Careful, liable UX is a thing now (Andrés Zapata) — Courts now recognize deceptive interfaces as actionable harm, forcing designers to audit for legal compliance. Identifying Necessary Transparency Moments In Agentic AI (Part 1) ([email protected] (Victor Yocco)) — The Decision Node Audit framework maps backend logic to UI updates to build user confidence. R—K ’26: The Thinking and Code Behind a Portfolio Led by Presence (Ravi Klaassens) — True digital presence requires motion and code to function as a single, intentional system. From The Thread Furniture Website Design (r/UI_Design) — The gap between beautiful renders and reliable products becomes a critical liability when deceptive interfaces carry legal weight. Created a lava-lamp inspired time spent counter (r/UI_Design) — Playful visuals attempt to soften the punitive nature of screen time metrics while highlighting transparency tensions. Mapping complex multi step user flows in apps always turns into a mess anyone got good ways to handle edge cases (r/UXDesign) — Designers must shift from creators to risk managers who anticipate where systems might break. anyone switched from Dovetail to something that auto-captures from Slack and calls too? (r/UXResearch) — Automating insight collection risks trading deep qualitative understanding for the speed of data gathering. Today's Notable Articles Designing for the invisible customer — Jonathan Ng Looking at New CSS Multi-Column Layout Wrapping Features — Abhishek Pratap Singh Today's Notable Discussions Does anyone actually use AI? — r/UXDesign I've never seen a more egregious ghost job than "LiveRamp Junior UX Researcher" role — r/UXResearch Curious about how you grow your skills outside of your 9-5 — r/UXDesign What are your favorite daily or weekly UX newsletters? — r/UXDesign Any pattern generator/tools out there that are open to use? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
95
The Feed & The Thread - April 6, 2026
We confront the uncomfortable truth that the systems we build to improve things often make them worse, a tension Alexandra Vasquez highlights when she argues that AI will faithfully replicate our internal ambiguity unless we first fix our data models. While Nicolas Garnier shows how AI can subtly accelerate creative work without replacing human intuition, Heenesh Patel challenges us to admit our complicity in building addictive engagement systems that prioritize metrics over human costs. We then dig into the community's struggle between climbing the corporate ladder and loving the craft, asking whether we should try to fix these broken systems from within or build our own products to escape them entirely. From The Feed We didn’t mean to build this- engagement at any cost (Heenesh Patel) — Well-meaning designers become complicit in addictive systems when profit targets silence professional judgment. Data models: the shared language your AI and team are both missing ( Alexandra Vasquez) — AI faithfully replicates internal ambiguity if vague data models are not fixed before deployment. Building the Maxima Therapy Website: React, GSAP, and Dabbling with AI (Nicolas Garnier) — AI accelerates creative coding tasks while human goals remain the primary driver of design. From The Thread Principal Product Designers, VPs of Design, Design Leaders, etc in the US making high comp (300k and above), how did you get there? What did your path actually look like? (r/UXDesign) — High compensation requires mastering domain and people to own outcomes rather than just executing tasks. Enjoy UX work, but the day-to-day work feels very different than expected (r/UXDesign) — Designers face a tension between loving the craft and hating the corporate culture that surrounds it. Absolutely love UX Design, terribly hate corporate life and work culture (r/UXDesign) — Leaving corporate jobs often means working for the same corporations, forcing a choice to build one's own products. RPG Game UI/UX system (r/UXDesign) — Complex logic tools often feel disconnected from human intent, creating friction instead of managing complexity. How does one become a digital accessibility specialist? (r/UXResearch) — Accessibility is a fundamental requirement to build for everyone, as ignoring it actively excludes people. mcp is too complicated (r/UXDesign) — Tools are evolving faster than our understanding, creating confusion about how backend connectors integrate with design software. Today's Notable Discussions Feedback wanted on my local AI chat app UI — r/UI_Design Creating AirBNB style pills logic? — r/UI_Design Honest feedback wanted — why would someone land on this Play Store page and not install? — r/UI_Design Qualitative analysis extraction with AI? Spotting false negatives? — r/UXResearch About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
94
The Feed & The Thread - April 5, 2026
We explore the dangerous gap between visual polish and the collapsing invisible mechanics that actually make products work, questioning whether our obsession with aesthetics is eroding true usability. Allie Paschal argues that ignoring semantic structure leaves screen readers stranded, while Caleb Sponheim and Michael Buckley warn that vague AI definitions and "vibe coding" are creating mistrust and mistaking prototypes for production. In The Thread, we dive into community frustrations with Figma Make's unreliability and the growing suspicion that design challenges often prioritize speed over genuine problem-solving. From The Feed The invisible layer of UX most designers ignore (Allie Paschal) — Designers often overlook semantic structures like roles and states, rendering visually perfect interfaces unusable for assistive technology. “Vibe coding” is accelerating the erosion of design authority (Michael Buckley) — Confusing visible prototypes with robust architecture collapses the distance between design and code while eroding architectural decision-making. A Concrete Definition of an AI Agent (Caleb Sponheim) — Defining an agent as a system that iteratively pursues goals by deciding its own next steps is essential to resolve industry mistrust. From The Thread Experienced job hunting, portfolio/case study/resume questions and review — 04/05/26 (r/UXDesign) — Peer support remains essential for professionals navigating career uncertainty and trying to stand out in a crowded market. Thoughts on design challenges? (r/UXDesign) — Design challenges often prioritize speed over genuine problem solving, prompting designers to shift how they present their process to prove depth. Feedback on Learn with Frank, math and physics website (r/UI_Design) — Designers struggle to balance educational clarity with visual engagement to reduce cognitive load for complex subjects. Extremely frustrating to get anything done in figma make (r/UXDesign) — Users feel Figma Make is a toy that burns tokens without delivering the reliable results needed for serious production work. Recreating Zune Desktop UI in my python based library manager. [ 9 Screenshots ] (r/UI_Design) — Nostalgic retro aesthetics can drive modern passion projects by fueling creative technical experiments. Today's Notable Discussions What AI subscriptions are you guys using? — r/UXDesign How does your team handle AI Ethics in Product Design? (university student project) — r/UserExperience 4 months, an ocean of coffee, and 170 screens later... I designed the UI concept for my dream GTA-style game (from weapon customization to buying hypercars) — r/UI_Design Breaking into UX/early career: job hunting, how-tos/education/work review — 04/05/26 — r/UXDesign Any tips, books, or courses on how to design for kids? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
93
The Feed & The Thread - April 4, 2026
Today we confront the uncomfortable truth that our design ladders often reward personality over output, a structural trap Jessica Goldman argues is perpetuating our own burnout. While we debate whether AI is a tool for efficiency or a threat to empathy, we also explore the courage required to look like a fool while challenging these dysfunctional systems. From the brutal honesty needed for portfolio reviews to the cynical reality of CEO-mandated AI adoption, we ask who truly holds the pen when the pressure to ship outweighs the need for alignment. From The Feed AI Can Help with Survey Writing, But It Still Requires Human Expertise (Rachel Banawa) — Generative AI offers speed for survey drafting but lacks the human expertise needed to ensure data validity. Designers: We are perpetuating our own burnout problem (Jessica Goldman) — Subjective promotion criteria like "inspiring others" create structural bias that disproportionately harms women and fuels burnout. Madness and Imagination (iA Inc) — True design practice requires the courage to embrace failure and look like a fool while challenging dysfunctional systems. From The Thread Show UXDesign: Easy design to code software with good performance (r/UXDesign) — Practitioners are frustrated by the current handoff process and seek tools that balance ease of use with actual performance. How do I get alignment on the written version of vision/mission/values statements? (r/UXDesign) — Getting written agreement on values is often harder than shipping features yet defines every design decision. I just redesigned my collage site's UI and would love some honest feedback (r/UI_Design) — Designers are increasingly seeking unfiltered critique for their portfolios as a form of leverage in the job market. Today's Notable Articles Do less with AI — Joe Bernstein Falling apples and crumbling algos — Eleanor Howe Sniffing Out the CSS Olfactive API — John Rhea Today's Notable Discussions Feedback on this lamp I designed and made? — r/design_critiques Created a prototype of the infinite canvas feature to show how it works — r/UI_Design Did anyone who's been using Claude... just feel less motivated to open it lately? — r/UserExperience Help With Personal Project UI — r/UI_Design CEO said we have to use AI — r/UXDesign Starting as a solo Growth/Product Designer at an early-stage startup — r/UXDesign People don’t read anything anymore — they just click — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
92
The Feed & The Thread - April 3, 2026
We explore whether AI failures stem from a lack of intelligence or, as Connor Joyce argues, a critical failure of context that turns design into an act of curation. While we debate if layer naming and rigid design systems are true best practices or just bureaucratic friction, we also examine how feature bloat on platforms like Quora buries core value. From Edoardo Lunardi's obsession with invisible engineering details to Temani Afif's new CSS shape techniques, we ask if our daily habits are building trust or just satisfying managers. From The Feed Context matters… A lot (Connor Joyce) — AI errors stem from a lack of situational constraints rather than technical limitations. A Brief History of the Dust Jacket (John Boardley) — The article explores the historical evolution of book dust jackets. Where Engineering Meets Craft: Edoardo Lunardi’s Obsession with the Details (Edoardo Lunardi) — High-quality engineering acts as invisible craft that builds user trust. Making Complex CSS Shapes Using shape() (Temani Afif) — Designers can create organic shapes using pure CSS variables without relying on SVG assets. From The Thread Do people today still care about the design system at all? (r/UXDesign) — Teams often ignore rigid design systems when they feel like barriers to shipping speed. Just dawned on. Is Quora the worse UX design of the ‘social media’ platforms? (r/UXDesign) — Feature bloat on Quora buries its core value when the interface fights the content. How many of y’all name your layers? (r/UXDesign) — Naming layers is a discipline that separates quick prototypes from production-ready handoffs. Re-assigned to a New Meta Recruiter after month delay - Positive or Neutral? (r/UXResearch) — Hiring delays and recruiter changes can make researchers feel like commodities rather than partners. Some notes on how we can improve our craft (r/UXDesign) — The field is maturing by focusing on the thinking behind outcomes rather than new tools. Today's Notable Articles Interview with Amy Huang, Leadership in Design — Emi Knight Running your life from terminal is peak 2026 — and that’s not the flex you think it is — Arpy Dragffy Today's Notable Discussions Figma Make can generate wireframes from prompts now. — r/UI_Design Designing data tables is still way harder than it should be. How are ya'll solving this? — r/UXDesign Touch gesture analytics revealing that my navigation design worked better on paper than on thumbs — r/UXDesign How do people deal with being burned out? — r/UXDesign Bad sign job that posting is taking months to fill? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
91
The Feed & The Thread - April 2, 2026
We question whether our obsession with removing friction has inadvertently trapped users in an extractive attention economy, as Patrizia Bertini argues that optimizing for immediate experience often ignores cumulative societal harm. While we debate if natural language prompts are stripping away the intuitive weight of physical interfaces, our community threads reveal a field struggling to survive endless feedback loops and a market that demands rapid AI adaptation. Today, we explore if the smoothness we built is actually the problem and whether we can pivot fast enough to protect our mental energy in a collapsing industry. From The Feed Human-Centred Design has grown up. It’s time we did too. — Optimizing for immediate experience inadvertently turns humans into products by ignoring cumulative societal harm. Front-End Fools: Top 10 April Fools’ UI Pranks of All Time — Today's impossible UI hacks often become tomorrow's standard features after being mistaken for hoaxes. The Friction You Cannot Prompt — Replacing tactile UI with text commands creates a flat, cognitively exhausting experience that mistakes speed for a finished product. Today's Notable Articles Every designer on my team ships the same quality now — Hoang Nguyen AI is rewriting the rules. Language is following. — Dora Czerna Figma Skills for Claude Code — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions How to deal with developers changing the design? — r/UXDesign How do you deal with endless feedback loops from clients? — r/UXDesign Portfolio Review Requests — r/UI_Design Temporary Pivot - Advice — r/UXResearch Careers & Jobs Megathread — r/UI_Design One word causing more confusion than it should: Destination — r/UserExperience How to structure my freelance work so I can make more money? — r/UXDesign Time to say bye? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
90
The Feed & The Thread - April 1, 2026
We explore whether AI is finally returning design vision to creators by dissolving the structural barriers that once forced developers to prioritize architecture over feel, a shift Daniel Mitev argues is rewriting our traditional workflows. While we celebrate this renewed power through Damar Aji Pramudita's tangible visualization of complex shaders, we also confront the anxiety of cold outreach and the friction of clients demanding prototypes before research. Today, we navigate the gap between what stakeholders want and what actually works, asking if we can truly solve messy real-world logistics when we are still guessing instead of validating. From The Feed Animating 160,000 Cubes in Three.js to Visualize Dithering — Custom shaders make abstract image processing concepts tangible and engaging for a broader audience. The Joy Of A Fresh Beginning (April 2026 Wallpapers Edition) — A hands-off editorial approach grants artists full creative freedom to bring diverse positive vibes to screens. Designers finally have a say in the product they design. — AI dissolves structural barriers so details like easing curves survive the build without getting dulled. From The Thread My client needs a prototype — Rushing to visualize without validating forces designers to guess instead of solve, creating expensive dead ends. Any sample user interview videos for learning moderation skills? — Watching others fail and succeed is the fastest way to build confidence for leading your own session. Tips for cold outreach for interviews? — The uncomfortable ask of contacting strangers is the only way to get real data instead of assumptions. designing an app flow for coordinating local pop-up art workshops — Designing for messy real-world logistics is essential because apps fail if they cannot handle physical chaos. How do you actually design interactive websites? — Static mockups are insufficient without understanding the complex code logic needed for real behavior. Today's Notable Articles Agentic AI, design systems & Figma: a practical guide — Christine Vallaure Who wrote this? — iA Inc Codex plugin for Claude Code — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions usability testing recommendation — r/UXDesign Portfolio & Design Critique — April 2026 — r/UserExperience How would you improve this? — r/UI_Design How Does This UI Feel? — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
89
The Feed & The Thread - March 31, 2026
We confront the harsh reality that as hardware scaling hits a wall, our only path forward lies in ethical software innovation and genuine power-sharing, not just faster chips. From Neel Dozome's call for a new regulatory era to Samuel Martin's insistence that compensating experts is non-negotiable, we question whether our industry is truly ready to move beyond tokenism. Meanwhile, our community grapples with a terrifying tension: as we sprint toward total automation and AI-driven productivity, are we designing a future where there is no one left to use the tools we build? From The Feed Form Automation Tips for Happier User and Clients — Normalizing data at the front end prevents downstream errors like duplicate CRM entries. The long and short of telephone progress — Physical limits demand ethical software innovation rather than relying solely on faster chips. Rosenverse Live: 7 Insights on Sharing Power in Co-Design with Samuel Martin — Compensating experts is a non-negotiable baseline to avoid tokenistic feedback collection. From The Thread Soo what's the backup plan when oil goes over $150-300 per barrel and AI data centers become too expensive to operate? — Companies may raise prices and wait for market correction, ignoring actual user needs. Have you thought of having backup income when AI reduces jobs? — The shrinking of design roles forces professionals to rethink their value beyond traditional career ladders. We're sprinting toward productivity but who's actually going to be left to be productive — The tension between total automation and human necessity reveals a potential endgame of zero employees. Who are your favorite designers? — Finding role models is difficult when the entire design field feels like it is changing underneath us. Today's Notable Articles Where Confidence Needs No Decoration: The Malvah.Studio Story — Malvah Studio Proven way to improve code quality generated by Claude Code — Nick Babich The Best Way To Work With Claude Code — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions IU HCI/d AMA — r/hci New role, question about the design system — r/UXDesign Does design really own anything at companies - apart from Figma files and a design system? — r/UXDesign Anyone else shipping code now too? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
88
The Feed & The Thread - March 30, 2026
Today we confront the uncomfortable gap between AI's ability to let us build teams in a single text file and the corporate cultures that still punish the speed it creates. While Christine Vallaure proves one person can run five agents with just plain text, Jeff Gothelf warns that our leadership structures are still designed to reward false certainty rather than rapid pivots. We also dive into the community's growing anxiety over whether "vibe coding" and unbranded AI prototypes are outpacing our ability to check quality before they hit production. From The Feed A human approach to Agentic AI. One person. One text file. Five agents. — One person can run a virtual team of five distinct personas using nothing but plain text files. AI Rewards Being Wrong Faster. Your Organization Doesn’t. — While tools allow rapid business repositioning, leadership structures still punish pivots by demanding false certainty. Motion Highlights #17 — Fluid simulations guide attention and deepen emotional connection far better than static layouts. From The Thread Anyone else seeing this trend of huge AI prototypes at their companies? It doesn’t feel right — Developers often treat massive AI prototypes with UX issues as mere suggestions rather than fixing them. Is "Cleanup Crew" our final form? A Principal's take on the Design-PM-Eng collapse. — A Principal Designer questions their role if they are only involved in work at the final stretch. The design drift created by vibe coding is insane. How are you addressing it? — Organizations confuse local vibe coding with the separate problem of pushing bad code to production. Template thumbnails: skeletons vs mini previews — which works better? — Skeleton loaders signal loading while mini previews promise content, impacting perceived speed and trust. Today's Notable Articles Design engineers, UX Design’s demise, forget your “lovable” products — Fabricio Teixeira Claude Code + Figma Design System — Nick Babich The ground is shaking: Why designers must flip the script on AI — Peter (Zak) Zakrzewski Today's Notable Discussions I think the end is nigh (at least at my company) — r/uxwriting Figma design mode - "reveal" — r/UI_Design What’s the best way to learn how to leverage AI at your work? — r/UXDesign AMA: Found a role jumping from mid- to senior-level designer — r/UXDesign What happens when AI conducts 81,000 real conversations? — r/UXResearch Architectural design ⮕ Digital design, or what are the parallels between what we do and what architects do? — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
87
The Feed & The Thread - March 29, 2026
We ask whether our current panic about AI is just history repeating itself, as Dora Czerna argues that every wave of democratization triggers a crisis before new literacies emerge. We also challenge the assumption that speed is our primary goal, using Sara Paul's definition of the MVP to show why we often mistake stripped-down launches for genuine learning tools. While Brad Frost illustrates how friction between imagination and execution is vanishing, we navigate the community's anxiety over accessibility gaps and job market uncertainty to find where these tools actually earn their keep. From The Feed Disruption has a shape. Design history shows us what it is. — Historical crises like the printing press reveal that democratization triggers panic before new literacies emerge. My 8-year-old vibe-coded a video game about playing music with Michael McDonald — An eight-year-old creating a game in minutes proves the friction between imagination and execution has vanished. Minimum Viable Product (MVP): Definition — An MVP is a critical learning tool to test value, not a stripped-down launch driven by velocity. From The Thread Confirmation dialogs: Best practice to lead with a question or statement? — Leading with a question or statement in confirmation dialogs balances clarity and politeness to prevent user errors. Where has AI actually earned a place in your UX workflow? — The community is moving past hype to identify specific moments where AI genuinely saves time in daily workflows. Don't fall for spoofed UX recruiters — Spoofed recruiters targeting professionals highlight the vulnerability of a community facing a shifting job market. Does the WEF seem very optimistic about UX/UI job growth? — Disconnects between economic reality and industry forecasts create genuine anxiety about future job growth. 40-60% of fintech interfaces break for blind users—and most fixes aren't hard — Sixty percent of fintech apps fail for blind users despite simple fixes, showing accessibility is treated as an afterthought. Today's Notable Articles The design engineer symptom: what a rising job title reveals — Anna Lefour Raising the machine — Christine Vallaure Top 5 Google Stitch Features — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions Startup where my position was eliminated shorty after I started finally rolled out a design based on my work and I'm not sure how I feel about it. — r/UXDesign Does the WEF seem very optimistic about UX/UI growth? — r/UI_Design How to improve this animation sequence! — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
86
The Feed & The Thread - March 28, 2026
We tackle the sharp question of who owns design judgment when AI decides the interface, weighing Fabricio Teixeira's call for "livable" products against Kate Moran's warning about shifting accountability in GenUI. We also navigate the messy reality of whether data science credentials truly improve research or just pad resumes, while designers debate if AI is becoming a strategic necessity or a race to the bottom where product managers take over creative decisions. Join us as we dissect these tensions to figure out what it actually means to orchestrate AI agents without losing the human context that defines good design. From The Feed Must-Have UX/UI Design Skills for Claude Code — Designers must translate intent into technical constraints to effectively orchestrate AI agents for code generation. GenUI vs. Vibe Coding: Who’s Designing? — Accountability shifts depending on whether AI executes the design or judges the final outcome. Google Stitch, design maturity guide, livable products — Outsourcing design thinking to algorithms risks long-term user well-being by prioritizing lovable over livable products. From The Thread Quant User Researcher Resources — Deep statistical training may replace the messy human context essential for asking the right research questions. The ratio of demand for PM's vs. Designers has flipped — Product managers letting AI make poor design choices signals a race to the bottom where execution outweighs empathy. Which tech industry is more “in need” of creative designers? — Valuing creativity only in consumer apps misses strategic opportunities in complex sectors like healthcare and logistics. Which AI tools are worth learning and incorporating in design workflows? — Blindly adopting every new tool creates clutter rather than speeding up an already crowded design process. Today's Notable Articles The Future of Apps — Dan Saffer Pell Mell: Crafting a Visual Exploration Platform with Editorial Rhythm — Gaspard Silvestre Taste is not a feature — Joshua Leigh Today's Notable Discussions What no one tells you in Design school (and I had to learn the hard way). — r/UXDesign CHI 2026 Registration Transfer Wanted — r/hci Is it worth reading? — r/UXDesign yeah I’m done — r/UXDesign What do you think of this UI for an MVP version of my purchase tracking app? — r/UI_Design GT hci — r/hci About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
85
The Feed & The Thread - March 27, 2026
We confront the uncomfortable reality that design debt is now as crippling as technical debt, a point Arin Bhowmick makes by showing how legacy decisions silently shape user belief in AI products. While Eoghan McCabe argues that vertical models offer durable differentiation, we also wrestle with the community's growing tension over unpaid design challenges and the high financial cost of AI token usage. This episode isn't just about new tools; it's a necessary reckoning on why bad design still ships and how we must stop being output factories to survive the shift. From The Feed Announcing Fin Apex: The age of vertical models is here — Domain-specific AI models outperform general ones by leveraging owned data flywheels for speed and cost. Design debt is now as dangerous as technical debt — Untracked legacy design decisions cripple products by shaping user beliefs rather than just usability. Generative UI Notes — AI-generated custom interfaces raise critical concerns about whether dynamic experiences can ever be truly inclusive. From The Thread How does bad design pass — Leadership often overrides expert advice, causing unusable products to ship because decision-makers lack product understanding. I’m officially fed up with "Design Challenges" that are just free consulting. How do you all handle this? — Designers argue companies must pay for real work output rather than expecting free labor disguised as interviews. It doesn’t make sense to try resisting AI, but I still hate it — While resistance to AI is futile, the financial burden of token usage creates deep tension within teams. Today's Notable Articles The Site-Search Paradox: Why The Big Box Always Wins — [email protected] (Carrie Webster) Meet the speakers for Designing with AI 2026 — aedwards The Five AI Moats — Dan Saffer Today's Notable Discussions Accountability for addictive design patterns — r/UXDesign Icon for menu picker that has filter, priority and complete options? — r/UI_Design Toggle button VS A11y — r/UXDesign Manager keeps pushing for tighter spacing… how do you handle this? — r/UXDesign Thought I'm cooked as a Developer and thought of learning Designing, but it seems you guys are cooked too!! It's sad — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
84
The Feed & The Thread - March 26, 2026
We're confronting the mirage of UX's demise while asking if our ethics can hold the line as AI agents take over complex tasks. From Luis Berumen Castro's argument that empathy remains essential to Alissa Tyrangiel's new tools for inspecting the AI black box, we explore how to prove design's value when users say one thing but do another. As the line between smart optimization and dark patterns blurs, we must decide if we are designing for fairness or just the bottom line. From The Feed What AI exposes about design — AI expands the designer's toolkit rather than replacing the core need for empathy. From Web UI to Game UI: How Gaming & Creativity Reshaped María Vargas’ Career — Web design foundations remain effective even when applied to the unique constraints of dynamic game experiences. Announcing Monitors: Opening the AI black box — Custom scorecards for high-risk conversations replace random sampling to ensure AI agents behave correctly. The mirage of UX Design’s demise keeps coming back — The core discipline of human-centered design remains essential despite recurring anxieties about job title changes. The Accessibility Gap in Agentic AI — Almost 10% of the CDC's AI deployments are already agentic. State and local governments face an April 2026 accessibility deadline. From The Thread App screen flow analysis vs what users tell you in interviews: the gap is bigger than I expected — Observation of actual user behavior consistently proves more reliable than self-reported interview data. When does dynamic pricing cross the line into a dark pattern? — Optimizing revenue risks crossing into user manipulation when the line between smart pricing and dark patterns blurs. Communicating value of UX to a non-tech/healthcare audience — Designers must translate good design into tangible life-saving or cost-cutting outcomes for non-technical healthcare leaders. Developer Forum - cookie consent permissions -> lead to rick rolling? This can't be ethical, how is this a thing? — ranks like rick rolling in consent flows destroy the fragile trust built between users and products. Today's Notable Articles Podcast: Rethinking Design Careers in a Broken System with Jen van der Meer — aedwards Claude Code Modes (including the latest Auto Mode) — Nick Babich Today's Notable Discussions New Tufts study: "Digital Interface Designers Most Exposed to AI" — r/UXDesign Is UMich really worth it for the cost? — r/hci Why do most apps overwhelm users in the initial minute? — r/UI_Design Portofolio Discussion — r/UI_Design Rethinking Chat App UX — r/UI_Design About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
-
83
The Feed & The Thread - March 25, 2026
We tackle the dangerous accountability gap when AI fails, asking who truly takes the blame as Dolphia argues that organizational structures often industrialize the diffusion of responsibility. We also explore how Ruben Ferreira Duarte reframes user-driven font scaling as a validation of robust design rather than a threat to aesthetics, while Sébastien Lempens shows how breaking the grid can forge a stronger brand identity. Finally, we navigate the heavier side of our community feed, from the fragility of workflows when leadership disappears to the growing frustration over job applications being treated as mere data capture. From The Feed Testing Font Scaling For Accessibility With Figma Variables — User-driven font changes validate robust design rather than destroying aesthetic integrity. Digital Craft, Wild Soul: Building San Rita’s Topographic Web Experience — Merging 3D terrain with vintage textures creates atmospheric brand identity beyond standard layouts. When AI experiences fail, who is held accountable? — AI failures stem from organizational structures that industrialize the diffusion of responsibility. From The Thread Question for HMs/Recruiters here - How do you treat cold emails? — Cold emails remain a primary outreach strategy despite often being ignored due to signaling friction. Deadline in 3 days, designer has done nothing, manager is MIA. What do I do? — Missing leadership exposes fragile workflows that force designers to choose between burnout and breaking protocol. Breaking out of the menu bar. Thoughts on always visible, floating action bars? — Floating action buttons trade user muscle memory for reclaimed screen real estate and new navigation patterns. If job hunting wasn't hard enough right now... it's being widely abused as data-capture. — Treating job applications as data capture commodifies human ambition and erodes trust in the hiring ecosystem. I never use statistics, is that normal? — Relying solely on qualitative insights limits a designer's ability to defend decisions to stakeholders. Today's Notable Articles Why ChatGPT-Style Answers are the Future of Site Search and How to Add It to Your Website — uxplanet.org The three thirds — Vlad Derdeicea How to Use Banner Tables to Present Survey Results — Jim Lewis, PhD • Jeff Sauro, PhD Today's Notable Discussions Extraversion as a requirement for UX professionals? — r/UXDesign Immediate VIP onboarding: Genuine user appreciation or a psychological trap? — r/UXDesign How would you design a viewer for thousands of time-stamped screenshots that need to be both browsable and searchable? — r/UXDesign How to handle managerial issue — r/UXDesign Content guidelines for agentic experiences (AX) — r/uxwriting About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.
HOSTED BY
Chicago Camps
Loading similar podcasts...