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  • Agents with taste by Emil Kowalski

    An engineer has never been more leveraged than today thanks to a fleet of agents. But when it comes to more visual work, like animations, coding agents don’t quite know what great feels like.

  • 10 UI patterns that won't survive the AI shift by Taras Bakusevych

    A practical guide with real product examples of what's replacing them.

  • Scroll-driven animations by Joshua Comeau

    One of the best ways to add a bit of personality to our websites is to animate things on scroll.

Read all week, picked once. The best design links — every Tuesday.

  • The five dimensions of craft by Ethan Eismann

    Timeless principles that separate products people use from products people love.

  • Design Systems are now Inference Systems by David Hoang

    The Inference System doesn’t care what the modal looks like but the insights to know when to invent something the library doesn’t contain at all.

  • The end of responsive images by Mat Marquis

    The sizes attribute has been a necessary evil but now, with an auto value capability, it’s completely transformed authoring responsive images on the web.

  • An interactive cover component by Kitty Giraudel

    A technical walkthrough on how to build a small interactive cover component, with some nifty CSS tricks.

  • Building a UI without breakpoints by Amit Sheen

    While breakpoints were an excellent answer to a real problem when multiple screen sizes emerged, modern interfaces are no longer page-first. They are component-first, nested, and reused across wildly different contexts.

  • You're not behind by Joey Banks

    You’re not falling behind. You’re in the middle of learning something new, along with everyone else. Me included. The reminder I keep coming back to is this: we're designers, not our tools.

  • Every feature should earn its place by Karri Saarinen

    A common story in product development goes like this: execution is cheap now, so why not build more things and see what sticks?

  • Do researchers still need to take notes in interviews? by Phil Morton

    Don’t just default to your usual way of taking notes. Think about what data you’ll need at the other end, and design your notes around it. The analysis (human or AI) will be much better for it.

  • Design token naming conventions by Stuart Robson

    Naming design tokens can look and feel simple right up until you have to do it for real. Choose a weak pattern and things get inconsistent fast. Choose a clear pattern and you get a shared language that helps both design and engineering move quicker.

  • Advanced icon design: Dots by Helena Zhang

    We’ll cover optical effects that elevate icons from good to great, borrowing heavily from type design.

  • I love AI, but it still can't design for shit by Jonny Burch

    Without a critical human eye, AI produces slop. The quality bar is yours to maintain.

  • Good taste the only real moat left by Raj Nandan Sharma

    Taste has become a serious topic in tech. When everyone can produce something that looks decent, the advantage shifts to judgment.

  • Mouth coding by Brad Frost

    Lately, I’ve been talking websites into existence. Not metaphorically, but actually sitting in important meetings with people — clients, collaborators, my wife, friends, neighbors — watching real websites materialize in front of us as we converse.

  • Output isn’t design by Karri Saarinen

    Design keeps being misunderstood in our industry. New tools keep promising to generate interfaces faster, move words to product instantly, or collapse design directly into code. The assumption behind them is clear: that design is the act of producing.

  • Creating taste as a designer (video) by Brandon Jacoby, Michael Riddering

    Interesting thoughts on taste, being creative with AI, and how to thrive in a 0-1 environment.

  • Start designing in content, not in code by Pavel Samsonov

    Putting the cart before the horse is not giving you real velocity wins.

  • Figma's woes compound with Claude Design by Martin Alderson

    I think Figma is increasingly becoming a go-to case study in the victims of the so-called "SaaSpocalypse".

  • Sketches through the fog by Roger Wong

    Possible paths for where the judgment goes when AI handles the production.

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