PixelatedSaturn

joined 2 years ago
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[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 14 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I'm a guy, sorry if I shouldn't comment here, but I just have to say I disappointed quite a lot of ladies.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 9 points 3 days ago

This guy has been so cringe for the last 5 years it's so hard to look at. Fractally cringe. Every single thing he does is cringe, his little adventures are cringe and his whole journey is cringe af. Cringe King.

He is so freaking boring!

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 1 points 6 days ago

A really nice read.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Sure, that could be a consequence in the long run, but it would be pretty bad for our immediate situation.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Had the same thing yesterday afternoon. At some point is was gone and it's not back today.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Good luck to you, hope you continue to be an active person on Lemmy.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 12 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Hope, this doesn't go anywhere. NATO is frail as it is.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Yeah... I think it's pointless to engage online, just so many trolls, so much ai, ... I still fall for it sometimes lol

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago

I meant like forensically finding out who they are. It can be done and I bet there is a lot of people online who would pitch in.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 16 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Can't people identify these agents?

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Me too, although I knew it well, just not that it has a name. Good to know.

But in my experience it often happens that people that actually don't know much about a subject and they might be sincere in their questions, but at the point where their preconceived notion would be challenged, they go into this sealioning thing

 

I think I'm done. I lost my job (unfortunately right after getting a mortgage) and after 3 months I can't get anything else. I'm 44, got plenty of experience, just not the right kind it seems.

I think I have also lost my desire to do this work. It could be that my current predicament is shaping this attitude. One thing certainly is : the recruitment process. All the dumb questions, all the dumb rejections. Anyway, this could be it. I could be out of design after 20 years. id say only half were mildly enjoyable.

It's not a good career. It's not even well paid. I don't understand why people want to do this kind of job. You have to defend yourself all the time, you have to prove yourself all the time, the people you are designing for are often people without any sense of design but they still often make all the decisions. And after 20 years, the same problems, the same needing to prove oneself, it's like nothing I have done matters. And all I have done is design stuff for tons of different companies that don't really add to the world. I haven't done anything that matters even though I worked really hard.

I understand there is a possibility that some people have a really nice career in design and they are respected and elevated and get to be promoted to other positions of they want. Maybe it was just bad luck for me.

The situation right now its, I need a job. The Ux world doesn't seem to want me anymore. I have so much to offer, but I can't spend so much of my life giving to something that doesn't want me and is not giving anything back.

 

The article examines how AI systems, by relying on predominantly western centric data, often reproduce historical power imbalances and cultural biases.

 

​Duolingo's Head of UX, Mig Reyes, announced that the company is replacing the term "UX Design" with "Product Experience (PX) Design" to better reflect its product-led focus.

Mixed reactions among designers, with some viewing it as a strategic rebranding and others as a marketing tactic. This change highlights the (pointless?) evolving nature of design terminology in the industry. ​

 

Cool article about Lean UX vs. Design Thinking.

Im usually closer to Lean UX, because of the nature of the work I'm doing (really fast iterations, no time for testing). Sometimes I wonder if Im even doing UX...

Anyway, both have their different place and understanding each, can help you use them to make your work better.

 

A guide to the never-ending list of fancy design roles—Web, UX, UI, Product, Service—what they do, how they overlap, and why companies keep inventing new ones.

 

Designing streets that make sense

 

In UX research, If you’re only looking for data that supports your point of view, you will find it. Great research challenges assumptions, uncovers blind spots, and leads to better decisions.

Cool video I found on truths about UX research.

 

I think jobs done remotely on a computer will be the first to go. People organizing stuff in complex systems, which often don't really add any value and exist only because some systems are old or unable to modernize, they will never get replaced.

All this saddens me.

 

Your portfolio isn’t just a collection of past jobs, it’s a showcase of what you could do if given the right opportunity. This video nails the point: instead of waiting for the perfect client, create a project that lets you flex your skills without constraints.

What really stood out to me was the idea of pushing it beyond a static mockup—actually building the project in Webflow, Framer, or even code to bring it to life. I haven't done that a lot, because its so time consuming and we have jobs, families, hobbies.

 

On Locked on really don't have any confidence in Mark. What do you think?

 

In the discovery phase of a UX project, a problem statement is used to identify and frame the problem to be explored and solved, as well as to communicate the discovery’s scope and focus.

 

I've been doing UX and UI for many years. I just returned to it two years ago, having been an art director for about 10 years in between.

Its been really exciting for these two years and I'm even coming up to some new interesting projects, but a lot of times I'm really not feeling it. I think it's probably also because I'm alone in a small team. The team is great, ultra supportive, great bunch of people. Still, often I feel like my talents should be in programming somewhere. But definitely not web development. I've done that in the beginning of my career and I never want to do it again. I think that currently UX is best positioned to be one of tyne most important professions in the digital space. Our tools will evolve closer and closer to the actual apps and we will need less and less engineers between prototypes and final apps. Why would I want to be a programmer? I just have this jearning of writing stuff down in a code and that it works exactly like I want to. Design is flimsy by nature. It's not mathematics.

Its a weird feeling I often get. I like ux. I'll for sure stay longer and see where it goes.

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