Interactivity
Show HN: SprintPulse – AI-powered retrospectives that drive action
Hi HN,I am the founder of SprintPulse. Like many of you, I used to dread retrospective meetings. They often turned into a repetitive cycle where we wrote down the same issues every sprint but never actually fixed them. "Better communication" was on our action item list for months.I built SprintPulse to fix that loop. It is a tool designed not just to collect feedback, but to make sure it leads to real change.When I looked at the tools available, I found they fell into two camps.On one
Show HN: Sushidata – automating the painful parts of competitor and VoC research
Hi HN,A few months ago we noticed a pattern. Every GTM, product, and marketing team we talked to had the same problem. They were drowning in external data from Reddit, Discord, Slack communities, competitor sites, and social channels. But turning all of that noise into something structured and useful took an enormous amount of time.We watched people spend days copying screenshots into spreadsheets, tagging posts, and checking competitor websites by hand. We were doing the same thing ourselves an
The long and short of telephone progress
Antitrust regulation, the birth of “Silicon Valley” and approaching the limits of Moore’s lawContinue reading on UX Collective »
Pixels of the Week – March 29, 2026
The week, we replace AI with humans and draw prompt answers, discover how AI hallucinations confuse shoppers and tourists and answer the question "can we educate accessibility overlay companies?". Also enjoy the longest line of sight on earth, beautiful illustrations, and an adorable Ikea x Tiny Chef collab.
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
Why is real-world ASR still ~85% when lab models claim >95%?
Curious to hear what approaches people are taking, what the bottlenecks are, and whether anyone here is pushing toward the goal of "AI that understands you, the first time."I've been diving into the gap between benchmark ASR performance and real-world speech. Models like Whisper and Deepgram show impressive >95% accuracy in ideal conditions. But in the wild — accents, noisy environments, emotional speech, code-switching, overlapping speakers — accuracy often drops sharply, ofte
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 —
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
Show HN: Create an onboarding flow on Flutter in 5 min
Hey Flutter devsIf you've shipped apps before, you know how important it is to have an efficient and polished onboarding flow. It's the first thing users see and often the reason they leave.You've probably first focused on the core of your app, what makes it different. And now, you want to push it to the store, but you know you have to build an onboarding flow... and it's a little painful.Onboarding flows are deceptive. They are super easy to build technically, but very diffi
Show HN: Synesthetic Computation
"When perception shifts, and the feeling of control takes over")I wrote up a deep dive into a security issue in OpenClaw that escalates from a seemingly small UX/trust boundary problem into full remote code execution via a single malicious link.The article walks through the full exploit chain from a systems perspective rather than just a CVE summary. The key theme is what I call “synesthetic computation”: when subjective context, UI state, agent memory, and system permissions get
Show HN: Aperture Core – a human attention control plane for agent systems
I just released the first public version of Aperture Core, an SDK for deciding which agent events deserve human attention now, which should wait, and which should stay in the background.The core loop is simple:
- publish an event
- get back a frame if it should enter the human attention surface
- render that frame in your UI/workflow
- submit the human response back into the engineAs agents get more capable and one human starts supervising more of them, the bottleneck shifts toward human at
Show HN: RotaFlow – A privacy-first shift calendar built with SwiftUI
I built RotaFlow to solve the UX disaster of current shift work apps. Most incumbents are web-wrappers laden with ads.The Stack:* Language: Swift 6 / SwiftUI.
* Persistence: Core Data synced via CloudKit (NSPersistentCloudKitContainer).
* Architecture: MVVM with a custom "LoopEngine" for O(1) shift calculation.The Interesting Part:
I implemented a "Future Cliff" paywall. The app is fully functional for the next 30 days. Accessing dates beyond t+30d triggers a blurred UI
Disruption has a shape. Design history shows us what it is.
Democratisation, panic, quality collapse, then new norms emerging. This isn’t new terrain.Scroll through any design discussion right now and you’ll find the same anxieties circulating. The specifics vary. Which tools to learn, whether the career ladder still holds, what counts as “distinctly human,” to name a few. But the underlying question is the same: will AI replace us, and what should we be doing about it?The unease is palpable, and it’s not abstract. Design teams are shrinking. Generative
Google Stitch, design maturity guide, livable products
Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.“I woke up this morning to see Figma stocks had plummeted by nearly 12% as a result of Google formally launching its Google Stitch AI design tool. I was in a 1:1 call with my manager today, and she was telling me about how she thinks something big is brewing. She was there during the rise of Figma when the majority of the design market was still using Sketch.”Google says “Vibe Design” is here, but it didn’t pass my vibe check →By Elvis
Taste is not a feature
On judgement, context, and why AI makes taste more important, not less.Photo by Juan Miguel Agudo on Unsplash“Taste has no system and no proofs. But there is something like a logic of taste: the consistent sensibility which underlies and gives rise to a certain taste.” — Susan Sontag, 1964 1Sixty years later, that line lands with a different weight. We are living through the fastest expansion of productive capability in the history of creative work. AI can generate interfaces, brands, campaigns,
Stop Designing for Delighted Users (and Start Designing for Cognitive Strain)
"Delight" is the ultimate trap: by making the web frictionless, we’ve made it forgettable. In 2026, the most successful brands are abandoning "seamless" UX in favor of "Meaningful Friction"—intentional hurdles that wake up the user’s brain and turn passive clicks into lasting loyalty.
The Site-Search Paradox: Why The Big Box Always Wins
In the early days of the web, the search bar was a luxury, added to a site once it became “too big” to navigate by clicking. We treated it like an index at the back of a book: a literal, alphabetical list of words that pointed to specific pages. If you typed the exact word the author used, you found what you needed. If you didn’t, you were met with a “0 Results Found” screen that felt like a digital dead end.Twenty-five years later, we are still building search bars that act like 1990s index car
Testing Synthetic Research in Practice
I’ve spent the past few months watching synthetic research show up everywhere. Conference talks. LinkedIn posts. Case studies. Every time I saw it, I had the same reaction. This is going to be a disaster.Not because synthetic research is inherently bad, but because I know what happens when a new tool promises efficiency. Someone uses it to skip the real work. Someone points to synthetic data and says “we don’t need to do user research anymore!”The User Research Strategist
The mirage of UX Design’s demise keeps coming back
Why do we declare endings when we don’t understand transitions?Continue reading on UX Collective »
Increase Website Engagement with Micro Interactions
This CXL Feed explores the use of micro-interactions on websites and landing pages, inspired by Apple's iPhone 16 launch page.