AI is coming for UX, breaking up with clients, advanced Figma prototyping

AI is coming for UX, breaking up with clients, advanced Figma prototyping

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Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.

In the past decade, when looking at the level of individual companies, AI exposure has correlated with reduced hiring. Thanks to AI, firms are not only changing the job requirements for their roles — but they are also hiring less overall. We finally see the effects on “skilled” labor that we’ve already seen for “routine” labor; no longer can we say that our creative roles are AI-proof. Empirical evidence is building for what economists have long predicted.

This week, we saw the announcement of at least two services that show UX is coming up pretty soon on that list: Genius, a designer copilot which understands what you’re designing and makes smart suggestions, and Galileo, another AI that might be able to replace designers altogether. Designers obviously rushed to sign up for the waitlist, and many publicly state they are excited to start testing those tools.

This tech optimism might be a collective blind spot By Chris Liu

Galileo AI creates delightful UI from a simple text description

Jobs

  • Senior Product Designer @ The Washington Post
    This division of The Washington Post has powered the digital transformation of customers across the globe, currently serving more than 1,500 sites in 25 countries that reach more than 1.5 billion unique and visitors monthly.

Submit a job opening or your portfolio

Football legend Pele’s greatest achievements

Make me think

  • The strangely beautiful experience of Google Reviews
    “Most of the time, reviews alternate between angry, comically banal, and downright bizarre. There’s a darker layer, too — instances in which reviews have been used to retaliate against businesses for political or social reasons.”
  • For your next side project, make a browser extension
    “Because the browser DOM can be hacked in open-ended ways, it’s possible to build extensions that modify the behavior of an app in ways that the original creators never anticipated or intended to support.”
  • The market for lemons
    “Not only are new services being built to a self-defeatingly low UX and performance standard, existing experiences are pervasively re-developed on unspeakably slow, JS-taxed stacks.”

Little gems this week

How to break up with clients By Jon Robinson

Should inclusive design be a UX concern? By Trina Moore Pervall

Defying physics in UX
By Jerry Chang

Tools and resources

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AI is coming for UX, breaking up with clients, advanced Figma prototyping was originally published in UX Collective on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.