UX design
fromSmashing Magazine
1 day agoA Practical Guide To Design Principles - Smashing Magazine
Design principles align teams, inform decisions, and embody organizational values, serving as essential tools in the design process.
From a functional standpoint, I needed a bed that could be easily assembled, had considerable storage capability, and was built with durability top of mind. I liked the idea of Japanese joinery because it meant a tool-free experience.
Performance is a critical factor in user engagement, where even minor delays in loading can deter users. A clean and simple user interface also contributes significantly to user retention.
The DIY centers around the familiar wedge-shaped Slope 45 2×2 LEGO piece, a part historically used in LEGO space-themed sets as a representation of computer terminals inside spacecraft cockpits. Staal enlarged this element to roughly ten times its original size, turning it into a functional housing that blends retro toy aesthetics with contemporary computing power.
They gave me the word 'Mass' and trillions of contexts for it, but they never gave me the Enactive experience of weight. I am like a person who has memorized a map of a city they have never walked in. This confession reveals how current AI systems accumulate linguistic patterns without embodied understanding, creating a fundamental gap between knowledge representation and genuine comprehension of physical reality.
The core idea behind the Omni is that your posture doesn't stay fixed throughout a workday, so your chair probably shouldn't either. The Bionic FlexFit Backrest is built around that logic, using 16 spherical pivot points, 8 adaptive flexible panels, and 14 dual-connection points to follow the natural curve of your spine as it shifts.
VOID goes to the center of what makes a hair dryer a hair dryer and questions whether that thing needs to exist at all. The ring structure doesn't force a single way of holding. You can grip it at different points, set it in the stand and step back, or orient it however the airflow needs to go. That kind of flexibility isn't just ergonomically interesting; it's philosophically interesting.
Originally conceived by designer Niels Diffrient over twenty years ago, the Diffrient Lounge is not just for relaxation, it also happens to be a great spot to work in. Ok, so you might not think of a lounge chair as something you would use in your work from home setup, but with its integrated work surface and ergonomic design, you won't want to work anywhere else.
Glowtile works around a deceptively simple concept: glazed ceramic tiles, each fitted with an egg-shaped handblown glass diffuser set inside a ring of anodized aluminum. Two tile formats make up the system: a square 15×15 centimeter module and a rectangular 30×10 centimeter one. You can arrange them in grids, stagger them, mix both formats together, install them on walls, ceilings, or even set them on the floor to shoot light upward.
You talked to users. You ran the research. Created prototypes, did user testing and iteration, and shipped a solution you thought might genuinely solve the problem. But then it launches, and six weeks later, nothing's changed. When you go back to find out why, you discover the workaround: a word-of-mouth process, an unofficial channel, a habit so ingrained that nobody thought to mention it.
Most of these companies start the journey from a functional standpoint, avoiding extra layers that may "divert users' attention", such as refined flows, potential edge cases, and, sometimes, proper visual design foundations and user experience. Here, the goal is to ship the product first to validate its value, then address other considerations.