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.
Celebrities I am begging u to stop launching beverage lines and start getting serious. Where are the railroads? The concert halls? The amassing of steel? The bribing of senators? Feels like I’m dealing with a bunch of amateurs.
— Keara Sullivan (@superkeara)
Attending an honest-to-god Jenny Nicholson Galactic Starcruiser watch party this evening.
I get the (entertaining) dunking, but people just now learning about this are misunderstanding why some are so fiercely defending it. It's not just Disney or Star Wars brand devotion.
— Kyle Tague (@KyleTague)
(2) Matthew Chapman on X: "With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it." / X
— Matthew Chapman (@fawfulfan)
With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it.
— Matthew Chapman (@fawfulfan)
Reggie James on Twitter / X
With Hardware, you have to really live with the decisions you make Those decisions get transferred over to consumers that subconsciously realize they have to live with it tooThat’s why people complain about devices more than software & with the prestige of the Humane team…… pic.twitter.com/0rlni7dL0r— Reggie James (@HipCityReg) March 28, 2024
kelin on X: "recent reflections on how i'd want to teach product design in 2024 https://t.co/CT8P5xxjxr" / X
arne ness on Twitter / X
more generally, there is a deceitful suggestion that the critique of productivism or even industrialization is inherently reactionary or 'primitivist'. i understand it to be a critique of the abstraction of nature into value, a process which notably did not cease under AES— arne ness (@arne__ness) March 12, 2024
🔻Spring🌸Plum☭ on Twitter / X
They started finding the evidence to confirm this like 20yrd ago. And it’s actually coming from an overlap of two issues. https://t.co/I26fm8lQgR— 🔻Spring🌸Plum☭ (@ooomeboshi) March 12, 2024
Ariele 🌐🏗️ on Twitter / X
a close friend of mine works in the music industry, so I have takes on music streaming 🧵Spotify has never turned a profit in any year of its existence, this means Spotify's shareholders are already subsidizing artists.streaming services saved the industry from literal /1 https://t.co/CaSYct4TS6— Ariele 🌐🏗️ (@weatherdai) March 10, 2024
(1) lara mendonça 🇵🇸 on X: "presented without context 🫠 https://t.co/CyBjvS8uqd https://t.co/2qzwv163N8" / X
presented without context 🫠https://t.co/CyBjvS8uqd pic.twitter.com/2qzwv163N8— lara mendonça 🇵🇸 (@laraisuncool) December 4, 2023
Christopher Nolan Art & Updates on X
Martin Scorsese on Barbenheimer:
“I do think that the combination of Oppenheimer and Barbie was something special. It seemed to be, I hate that word, but the perfect storm. It came about at the right time. And the most important thing is that people went to watch these in a…