Interactivity

TelUI 1.2: TelUI with fun alignments

# TelUITelUI is a Electron-based UI framework that packages a handful of reusable front-end primitives—color utilities, typography helpers, and basic structural styles—so you can prototype simple desktop UI ideas with minimal setup.## Features - Bundled Electron runner (`npm start`) that serves `index.html` for instant desktop previews. - Tokenized styling layers: `color.css`, `font.css`, `header.css`, and `align.css` keep presentation rules isolated and easy to remix. - Micro-interaction helper

TelUI 1.1: New TelUI version Complete with tools to develop good software

# TelUITelUI is a Electron-based UI framework that packages a handful of reusable front-end primitives—color utilities, typography helpers, and basic structural styles—so you can prototype simple desktop UI ideas with minimal setup.## Features - Bundled Electron runner (`npm start`) that serves `index.html` for instant desktop previews. - Tokenized styling layers: `color.css`, `font.css`, `header.css`, and `align.css` keep presentation rules isolated and easy to remix. - Micro-interaction helper

Show HN: Tikpal- Your AI Voice Partner – Focus, Flow, Forge

We’re building Tikpal, an AI voice productivity tool based on a simple principle: Human creativity should remain the core engine. AI should be an accelerator, not the protagonist.The goal is to reduce screen dependency and cognitive fragmentation, and let people work in a more natural “voice-first” flow. Instead of clicking through interfaces and context-switching between apps, you talk to Tikpal, and it helps you think, structure ideas, and execute tasks.Three layers we are focusing on:FOCUS —

Show HN: LogiCart – Agentic shopping using Generative UI (A2UI pattern)

Hey HN, I’m the solo builder behind LogiCart.I recently refactored my frontend to use a Generative UI pattern (inspired by Google's new A2UI framework) because I realized a static chat interface fails for complex shopping intents.The Problem: A user buying a single item needs a completely different UX than a user planning a complex project. A standard "list of cards" doesn't work for both.The Solution: I built an Intent-to-UI engine where the LLM decides the interface structu

Show HN: Subatix – your local-first consulting team in an AI-workspace

Hello HN!We, a team of 2, built Subatix after one of us spent almost 6 years in big consulting and at certain point came to a thought like «90% of what consulting is usually data-analysis related, why not make smth so any business get same level of insights without externals and 6-figure+ checks and fast?!». Based the experience during every project everyone wants - fast answers from their data, but real ops/business data is messy, sensitive, and hard to outsource to generic AI tools due to

Show HN: I built a Finances app for Mac where you own the SQLite database

Hey HN,I feel like there is a gap in personal finance apps: local-first options typically have less polished UIs, while those with great design like Monarch Money are not local-first. This app fills the gap by providing a modern UI like Monarch/Monzo along with a database that you can hack around with outside of the app. File > app!- Local-first: transactions are stored in an encrypted SQLite database on your Mac, so you can read/write to it with Claude Code or your favourite DB cli

What happened to the car designed for women, by women?

Lessons learned from the Volvo YCC and feminized crash test dummiesContinue reading on UX Collective »

Building Dynamic Forms In React And Next.js

This article is a sponsored by SurveyJSThere’s a mental model most React developers share without ever discussing it out loud. That forms are always supposed to be components. This means a stack like:React Hook Form for local state (minimal re-renders, ergonomic field registration, imperative interaction).Zod for validation (input correctness, boundary validation, type-safe parsing).React Query for backend: submission, retries, caching, server sync, and so on.And for the vast majority of forms —

Why B2B UX features fail

The one question you always need to keep in mind for B2B projectsContinue reading on UX Collective »

Leading design teams is easy, but we made it complicated

Should product design teams be 100% creative, effective, or a middle ground between both? How do you know a product design is succeeding? What is our actual reality in business? These questions, and many more, are part of a deep reflection on our presence, impact, and issues in tech companies.No matter how big, traditional, or new the company is, design teams always face challenges that make it hard to execute and make their value visible to the company.Today, many businesses start as a small id

Why safe AGI requires an enactive floor and state-space reversibility

With LLMs, we have built the peak of synthetic cognition without the base — and the Anthropic-Pentagon standoff shows us what that costs.In early March 2026, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei refused the Pentagon’s demand to remove all safeguards from Claude. His core argument was structural, not political: frontier AI systems are simply not reliable enough to operate without human oversight in high-stakes physical environments. The Pentagon’s demand was, in structural terms, a demand to eliminate the

The calm and charm of cosy games in a chaotic world

What this gentle genre of design reveals about building digital products for anxious times.At some point in the last few years, millions of people arrived at the same conclusion: what they needed was a smaller, slower, quieter world. One with fish to catch, vegetables to grow, and absolutely no breaking news alerts. And so we reach for a virtual watering can.Cosy games are having a moment. Arguably, they’ve been having it for a while. Animal Crossing: New Horizons launched in March 2020, the sam

Sycophancy: the emperor’s new clothes

Why AI’s real danger isn’t hallucination — it’s agreement.The conversation about AI risk over the past years revolved around accuracy, the ability to pass tests and whether it is conscious. Yes, large language models (LLM) hallucinate, and they confidently fabricate citations and invent facts. Remember when Google’s AI made headlines in 2024, and then it recommended adding rocks to your diet for minerals? News like that often made headlines because it was absurd to share.But as these models impr

We thought AI feedback was making our designers faster. It was making them shallower

The designs shipped faster; the designers grew more slowly.Continue reading on UX Collective »

What Should a UX Design Portfolio Contain?

Your UX design portfolio is the key that gets you a job interview, and it is therefore vital that you include everything necessary in it. After all, a recruiter spends only a few minutes to form an opinion of you through your portfolio. If you’re new to UX, however, you might not know what exactly needs to go inside a UX portfolio. Fret not—we’ll examine the anatomy of a UX design portfolio to tell you what you should communicate through it and what you should include in it.What Should Your UX D

Token Fatigue: When Abstraction Eats Itself

Design tokens were supposed to make our lives easier—but now they’re eating us alive. What started as a way to create harmony between design and code has turned into an endless maze of abstractions, debates, and JSON files nobody understands. This is the story of how our obsession with consistency turned design systems into bureaucracies.

Product ethics, AI adoption theatre, an architecture that no longer exists

Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.“In the last week of February 2026, something unusual happened. A sitting US president took to social media to brand a private technology company a political threat. The Secretary of Defense designated that same company a supply chain risk, a classification previously reserved for foreign adversaries. And hours later, a rival AI lab swooped in and took the government contract that had just been refused.”Product ethics have never matter

Persuasive Design: Ten Years Later

Ten years ago, persuasive design was a relatively new frontier in the field of UX. In a 2015 Smashing article, I was among those who showed a way for practitioners to move from being primarily focused on improving usability and removing friction to also guide users toward a desired outcome. The premise was simple: by leveraging psychology, we could influence user behavior and drive outcomes like higher sign-ups, faster and richer onboarding, and stronger retention and engagement.A decade later,

Design is not just how it works. Design is how it wins.

In the age of AI, “working” is a commodity while “winning” is the new mandate.Continue reading on UX Collective »

The deceptive side of robot cuteness

And the different kinds of cute design techniques.Photo by Ant Rozetsky on UnsplashMany designers are applying cute design to their robots for good reason: research shows that cute design enhances social presence, helps people form attachments faster, and makes users more forgiving when things go wrong.At CES in recent years, cute robots have been everywhere. The variety shows that cuteness in design has more layers than just the traditional ‘round shape, big eyes’ baby look.Cuteness competition