Slow growth, emotional residue, 10 Figma hacks, from idea to vibe coding

Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.

“Today’s pine trees are bred to grow fast to meet the demands of modern lumber production. They mature in about half the time, but with far fewer growth rings. And those rings matter. Fewer rings mean weaker lumber. The fibers are looser, the boards are lighter, and the structural integrity just isn’t the same.”

A case for slow growth
By Jon Daiello

Editor picks

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Make me think

  • No code is dead; long live vibe coding
    “Natural language is proving to be a more powerful interface than drag-and-drop WYSIWYG editors. And most importantly, people don’t want to be locked into proprietary runtimes. They want actual code. They want control. They want to scaffold, edit, and deploy anywhere.”
  • How to hire
    “Established talent presents problems. They come with fixed ideas. They’ve developed methods at previous jobs and don’t want to change them. They believe they know the ‘right way’ to do things, which often conflicts with how your team works.”
  • The precise language of good management
    “The most common example of imprecise language is when someone asks you in a 1:1 ‘how am I doing?’ Very few managers are ready to answer this question well on the spot. But managers answer the question anyway and often say things like: ‘Oh you’re doing well, communication could improve a bit but overall you’re doing well.’”

Little gems this week

DesignShift: from mindset to access
By Ida Persson

There’s always more pie
By Trip Carroll

The 500-year-old underdog no one is talking about
By Rosie Hoggmascall

Tools and resources

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Slow growth, emotional residue, 10 Figma hacks, from idea to vibe coding was originally published in UX Collective on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

 

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