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1000 results for “Just_UX”
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Here is just a little #UX hint for the good people who develop #YouTube: I shouldn't be able to watch, literally, ONE fucking video that is unusual for me, and then have my entire recommendation feed completely changed.
Completely.
How can your system be that sensitive, and that delicate?
One video shouldn't change everything in my feed!
#uxdesign #recommendations #recommender #userexperience #uiux #uidesign #uiuxdesign
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Woke up to see my Brave UX episode just passed Jen Briselli in views.
Already beyond Abby Covert, Kelly Goto, and Josephine Wong.
Humbled to be in such company — and grateful to everyone who’s watching.
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Woke up to see my Brave UX episode just passed Jen Briselli in views.
Already beyond Abby Covert, Kelly Goto, and Josephine Wong.
Humbled to be in such company — and grateful to everyone who’s watching.
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This accidentally reminded me of my other belief:
Companies are oftentimes making it so like their users are dumb. When in reality it's just the poor UX and lack of affordances that make people do "dumb" things. And dumb in big quotes.
Here I am not able to lookup email address according to domain, but I do know that Gmail search is first class. So I can use that to find said company name in the email body. Giving me a pointer to the desired email address.
Users are not dumb, designs are. -
You can have green DORA metrics and still have miserable developers.
Speed ≠ Joy.
To get real IDP adoption, we need to treat platforms like products. APIs aren't enough.
Read my new article for Platform Engineering here: https://platformengineering.org/blog/the-empathy-gap-why-your-platform-needs-ux-not-just-apis
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You can have green DORA metrics and still have miserable developers.
Speed ≠ Joy.
To get real IDP adoption, we need to treat platforms like products. APIs aren't enough.
Read my new article for Platform Engineering here: https://platformengineering.org/blog/the-empathy-gap-why-your-platform-needs-ux-not-just-apis
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You can have green DORA metrics and still have miserable developers.
Speed ≠ Joy.
To get real IDP adoption, we need to treat platforms like products. APIs aren't enough.
Read my new article for Platform Engineering here: https://platformengineering.org/blog/the-empathy-gap-why-your-platform-needs-ux-not-just-apis
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You can have green DORA metrics and still have miserable developers.
Speed ≠ Joy.
To get real IDP adoption, we need to treat platforms like products. APIs aren't enough.
Read my new article for Platform Engineering here: https://platformengineering.org/blog/the-empathy-gap-why-your-platform-needs-ux-not-just-apis
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You can have green DORA metrics and still have miserable developers.
Speed ≠ Joy.
To get real IDP adoption, we need to treat platforms like products. APIs aren't enough.
Read my new article for Platform Engineering here: https://platformengineering.org/blog/the-empathy-gap-why-your-platform-needs-ux-not-just-apis
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I’ve been leaning on ripgrep a lot lately. I always knew it existed, but I never fully appreciated it until I started working with larger, fast-changing codebases. Now rg is one of my most-used commands.
What I love most is that it respects .gitignore, so it skips things like venv and node_modules without extra effort. And honestly, the overall UX is just fantastic.
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I’ve been leaning on ripgrep a lot lately. I always knew it existed, but I never fully appreciated it until I started working with larger, fast-changing codebases. Now rg is one of my most-used commands.
What I love most is that it respects .gitignore, so it skips things like venv and node_modules without extra effort. And honestly, the overall UX is just fantastic.
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I’ve been leaning on ripgrep a lot lately. I always knew it existed, but I never fully appreciated it until I started working with larger, fast-changing codebases. Now rg is one of my most-used commands.
What I love most is that it respects .gitignore, so it skips things like venv and node_modules without extra effort. And honestly, the overall UX is just fantastic.
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I’ve been leaning on ripgrep a lot lately. I always knew it existed, but I never fully appreciated it until I started working with larger, fast-changing codebases. Now rg is one of my most-used commands.
What I love most is that it respects .gitignore, so it skips things like venv and node_modules without extra effort. And honestly, the overall UX is just fantastic.
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I’ve been leaning on ripgrep a lot lately. I always knew it existed, but I never fully appreciated it until I started working with larger, fast-changing codebases. Now rg is one of my most-used commands.
What I love most is that it respects .gitignore, so it skips things like venv and node_modules without extra effort. And honestly, the overall UX is just fantastic.
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I was pointed at this blog post https://amberwilliams.io/blogs/building-my-own-pkms and it seems to reflect my feelings about #PKMS lately: it's extremely hard to find one that works for me, because I don't need an app. I need a framework that would work alongside me, not force me into its limitations.
As the org-roam manual says,
> One key advantage to Org-roam is that building on top of Emacs gives it malleability. This is especially important for note-taking workflows. It is our belief that note-taking workflows are extremely personal, and there is no one tool that’s perfect for you. Org-mode and Org-roam allows you to discover what works for you, and build that perfect tool for yourself.
In the end, the best tool for me was #TiddlyWiki. I just hated the UX. Well, now that I'm back to making my own tooling, I decide the UX and it works the way I need it to. And for me, running ripgrep over my notes is a perfectly acceptable global search solution.
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I was pointed at this blog post https://amberwilliams.io/blogs/building-my-own-pkms and it seems to reflect my feelings about #PKMS lately: it's extremely hard to find one that works for me, because I don't need an app. I need a framework that would work alongside me, not force me into its limitations.
As the org-roam manual says,
> One key advantage to Org-roam is that building on top of Emacs gives it malleability. This is especially important for note-taking workflows. It is our belief that note-taking workflows are extremely personal, and there is no one tool that’s perfect for you. Org-mode and Org-roam allows you to discover what works for you, and build that perfect tool for yourself.
In the end, the best tool for me was #TiddlyWiki. I just hated the UX. Well, now that I'm back to making my own tooling, I decide the UX and it works the way I need it to. And for me, running ripgrep over my notes is a perfectly acceptable global search solution.
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I was pointed at this blog post https://amberwilliams.io/blogs/building-my-own-pkms and it seems to reflect my feelings about #PKMS lately: it's extremely hard to find one that works for me, because I don't need an app. I need a framework that would work alongside me, not force me into its limitations.
As the org-roam manual says,
> One key advantage to Org-roam is that building on top of Emacs gives it malleability. This is especially important for note-taking workflows. It is our belief that note-taking workflows are extremely personal, and there is no one tool that’s perfect for you. Org-mode and Org-roam allows you to discover what works for you, and build that perfect tool for yourself.
In the end, the best tool for me was #TiddlyWiki. I just hated the UX. Well, now that I'm back to making my own tooling, I decide the UX and it works the way I need it to. And for me, running ripgrep over my notes is a perfectly acceptable global search solution.
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I was pointed at this blog post https://amberwilliams.io/blogs/building-my-own-pkms and it seems to reflect my feelings about #PKMS lately: it's extremely hard to find one that works for me, because I don't need an app. I need a framework that would work alongside me, not force me into its limitations.
As the org-roam manual says,
> One key advantage to Org-roam is that building on top of Emacs gives it malleability. This is especially important for note-taking workflows. It is our belief that note-taking workflows are extremely personal, and there is no one tool that’s perfect for you. Org-mode and Org-roam allows you to discover what works for you, and build that perfect tool for yourself.
In the end, the best tool for me was #TiddlyWiki. I just hated the UX. Well, now that I'm back to making my own tooling, I decide the UX and it works the way I need it to. And for me, running ripgrep over my notes is a perfectly acceptable global search solution.
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I was pointed at this blog post https://amberwilliams.io/blogs/building-my-own-pkms and it seems to reflect my feelings about #PKMS lately: it's extremely hard to find one that works for me, because I don't need an app. I need a framework that would work alongside me, not force me into its limitations.
As the org-roam manual says,
> One key advantage to Org-roam is that building on top of Emacs gives it malleability. This is especially important for note-taking workflows. It is our belief that note-taking workflows are extremely personal, and there is no one tool that’s perfect for you. Org-mode and Org-roam allows you to discover what works for you, and build that perfect tool for yourself.
In the end, the best tool for me was #TiddlyWiki. I just hated the UX. Well, now that I'm back to making my own tooling, I decide the UX and it works the way I need it to. And for me, running ripgrep over my notes is a perfectly acceptable global search solution.
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Just in case I’m the only one for this dead obvious thing: #QR payments are amazing, but as a user I would like them to be treated as a bill rather than command.
If I scan the code (again) I want to know whether it has been paid? By whom? When? Has the payment been returned? Can I get a link to the payment in case it has been done by me? Etc…
This would prevent me in so many cases panicking and digging through atrocious #UX of my banks to find what has happened. -
Just sharing on behalf of a friend :D
If you're aged 16-30 and have 3-6 minutes to spare, why not give your feedback on landing page designs for a stem cell donation registry?
The link to the test is here - https://t.maze.co/513970774
Feel free to share!
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Just 1 day left to grab your early bird tickets
We’re nearly ready to share this year’s speaker lineup!
Event: Talk UX: Redesigning Place 📍
Dates: 17–18 September 2025 🗓️
Venue: Ironworks Studios, Brighton 🛠️
Tickets: https://talk-ux.com 💻
Get your tickets at: https://www.talk-ux.com/ 🎟️Bringing your team or coming with friends? Book 5 tickets and get 10% off
#TalkUX, #UX, #Brighton #LTUXBrighton #PeopleOfLTUXBrighton #UserResearch #ContentDesign
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Just 1 day left to grab your early bird tickets
We’re nearly ready to share this year’s speaker lineup!
Event: Talk UX: Redesigning Place 📍
Dates: 17–18 September 2025 🗓️
Venue: Ironworks Studios, Brighton 🛠️
Tickets: https://talk-ux.com 💻
Get your tickets at: https://www.talk-ux.com/ 🎟️Bringing your team or coming with friends? Book 5 tickets and get 10% off
#TalkUX, #UX, #Brighton #LTUXBrighton #PeopleOfLTUXBrighton #UserResearch #ContentDesign
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Just 1 day left to grab your early bird tickets
We’re nearly ready to share this year’s speaker lineup!
Event: Talk UX: Redesigning Place 📍
Dates: 17–18 September 2025 🗓️
Venue: Ironworks Studios, Brighton 🛠️
Tickets: https://talk-ux.com 💻
Get your tickets at: https://www.talk-ux.com/ 🎟️Bringing your team or coming with friends? Book 5 tickets and get 10% off
#TalkUX, #UX, #Brighton #LTUXBrighton #PeopleOfLTUXBrighton #UserResearch #ContentDesign
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Just 2 days left to grab early bird tickets ⏳
We’ll be announcing speakers soon ✨
Event: Talk UX: Redesigning Place 📍
Dates: 17–18 September 2025 🗓️
Venue: Ironworks Studios, Brighton 🛠️
Tickets: https://talk-ux.com 💻
Get your tickets at: https://www.talk-ux.com/ 🎟️
Thinking of coming with your team or a few friends? There’s a 10% discount when you book 5 tickets.
#UX #UserResearch #ContentDesign #Brighton #LTUX #LTUXBrighton #TalkUX #PeopleOfLTUXBrighton
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Just 2 days left to grab early bird tickets ⏳
We’ll be announcing speakers soon ✨
Event: Talk UX: Redesigning Place 📍
Dates: 17–18 September 2025 🗓️
Venue: Ironworks Studios, Brighton 🛠️
Tickets: https://talk-ux.com 💻
Get your tickets at: https://www.talk-ux.com/ 🎟️
Thinking of coming with your team or a few friends? There’s a 10% discount when you book 5 tickets.
#UX #UserResearch #ContentDesign #Brighton #LTUX #LTUXBrighton #TalkUX #PeopleOfLTUXBrighton
-
Just 2 days left to grab early bird tickets ⏳
We’ll be announcing speakers soon ✨
Event: Talk UX: Redesigning Place 📍
Dates: 17–18 September 2025 🗓️
Venue: Ironworks Studios, Brighton 🛠️
Tickets: https://talk-ux.com 💻
Get your tickets at: https://www.talk-ux.com/ 🎟️
Thinking of coming with your team or a few friends? There’s a 10% discount when you book 5 tickets.
#UX #UserResearch #ContentDesign #Brighton #LTUX #LTUXBrighton #TalkUX #PeopleOfLTUXBrighton
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Just a couple of tickets left now for my Writing design systems documentation session at 10am-1pm next Thursday, 29 May.
If you're available and want to learn how to create docs people can find, understand and use, I'd love to have you.
Tell your friends!