recent reflections on how i'd want to teach product design in 2024 > Software is now integrated into every aspect of our lives.
> The design of the digital products we use every day is more important than ever.
> But phone and computer interfaces are now mature and stable. Patterns are commoditized, processes are industrialized. Soon, generative Al and non-designers will be able to create live code for clean, standard interfaces - without needing professional designers to mock it up.
> The industry does not need more product designers to reinvent the wheel. The job market reflects this.
> At the same time, the arrival of generative Al models creates a new frontier for computing and opens up endless new creative possibilities. The way computers work is fundamentally changing. Designers are sorely needed to shape this new material. Likewise, the processes and responsibilities of the designer will evolve beyond the old ways of static mocks and design systems.
> In this new world, everyone is a beginner, craft is automatable, and creation is cheap. The ultimate differentiator will be the creator's perspective, taste, and judgment. The product design education for our current moment must prioritize this above all else.
What's the most well-designed mobile app out there?
— Michael · Design Partner (@MichaelFilipiuk)
design systems is just bringing cop/narc culture into software development and everyone just fell for the snake oil salespeople during peak ZIRP
— julius tarng cyber inspector (@tarngerine)
Anna Monaco on Twitter / X
Things this founder did in her preparation for Y-combinator approving her startup
kelin on X: "recent reflections on how i'd want to teach product design in 2024 https://t.co/CT8P5xxjxr" / X
kelin on Twitter / X
recent reflections on how i'd want to teach product design in 2024 pic.twitter.com/CT8P5xxjxr— kelin (@kelin_online) February 29, 2024
Scott Stevenson on Twitter / X
Aakash Gupta 🚀 Product Growth Guy on Twitter
AI for product managers
Nikita Bier on Twitter
The organizational culture that enables Apple designers to double the scope of a product roadmap based off their opinion & feelings—like adding a screen to show your eyes that users will never see—is something that could never exist at Facebook. pic.twitter.com/2JTVX2t6pJ— Nikita Bier (@nikitabier) June 6, 2023
Pat Bergstresser on Twitter
If your company’s OKRs are primarily business outcome oriented, how do you get UX improvements prioritized that don’t move a business metric?— Pat Bergstresser (@PatThePM) June 3, 2023
kepano on Twitter
the eccentricity of a brand should map to how often people interact with itif often: calmer and more conventional, if less often: eccentric and uniquee.g. boutique hotels and restaurants can/should have highly memorable design language because you don't spend much time there— kepano (@kepano) May 18, 2023
Esther Crawford ✨ on Twitter
A lot of folks have asked about how you'll be able to distinguish between @TwitterBlue subscribers with blue checkmarks and accounts that are verified as official, which is why we’re introducing the “Official" label to select accounts when we launch. pic.twitter.com/0p2Ae5nWpO— Esther Crawford ✨ (@esthercrawford) November 8, 2022
Sho Kuwamoto on Twitter
I’ve been thinking a lot about how @figma does product work. And what makes Figma “Figma”?This, in turn, made me realize I never followed up on my previous thread about roadmap prioritization.So here goes….https://t.co/WqInVKd1xj— Sho Kuwamoto (@skuwamoto) September 23, 2022
Ken Kocienda on Twitter
I prefer the simplest way to deliver a desired effect. I don’t say that I need springs and complex timings, because they might not be the best solution for the task. What is the best solution? The excerpt describes how I approach that question. tl;dr Design is how it works. pic.twitter.com/ayEosvACOi— Ken Kocienda (@kocienda) September 17, 2022