rbk

281 posts

rbk

rbk

@VRuoam

cracked Product designer

انضم Ocak 2022
135 يتبع26 المتابعون
Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Computer use is now in Claude Code. Claude can open your apps, click through your UI, and test what it built, right from the CLI. Now in research preview on Pro and Max plans.
English
2.4K
4.6K
56.2K
14.2M
Tereza Tizkova
Tereza Tizkova@tereza_tizkova·
Starting a growth group chat on WhatsApp. 📈 If you’re into growing companies and products, marketing, launch strategies, growth analytics, building brand, or even growing side projects… comment “growth” (with your favorite emoji) to join
English
608
8
448
44K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@paper server down
English
0
0
0
11
panda
panda@pandaa·
Deleting in 24 hrs, whoever Iikes and says “hi”, we’ll send you a surprise dm! 🐼
English
6.4K
215
10.9K
559.1K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@RThermo56 @PrajwalTomar_ shadcn is great, i use it for my web projects, howver for my native mobile apps, i see no other options other than heroui native at this point
English
1
0
1
30
Richard Thermo
Richard Thermo@RThermo56·
@VRuoam @PrajwalTomar_ shadcn/ui gives AI agents real access to your UI. Install, inspect, and compose components with full project context. shadcnstudio builds on top of that. Generate and refine full UI blocks in your IDE with AI.
English
2
0
1
30
Richard Thermo
Richard Thermo@RThermo56·
@PrajwalTomar_ It’s impressive, but it’s not the first UI library built for AI and developers.
English
1
0
3
173
Naive
Naive@usenaive·
Introducing Naive - hire autonomous employees with their own identity. Own compute. Own bank account. Own legal entity. Own email. Own credentials. Own mobile. No humans-in-the-loop. They sign up for tools, pay for services, deploy apps, file documents, and run your entire company. Describe a business. Naive runs it. Reply "Naive" + RT. Get $100 credit for free.
English
873
546
1.8K
432.9K
rbk أُعيد تغريده
Ben Gold
Ben Gold@bengold·
Can people stop building these slop machine apps? Designers don’t want to use them and they address only a fraction of the product design process. These don’t save anyone anytime and just introduce more garbage into the ecosystem.
Google Labs@GoogleLabs

Introducing the new @stitchbygoogle, Google’s vibe design platform that transforms natural language into high-fidelity designs in one seamless flow. 🎨Create with a smarter design agent: Describe a new business concept or app vision and see it take shape on an AI-native canvas. ⚡️ Iterate quickly: Stitch screens together into interactive prototypes and manage your brand with a portable design system. 🎤 Collaborate with voice: Use hands-free voice interactions to update layouts and explore new variations in real-time. Try it now (Age 18+ only. Currently available in English and in countries where Gemini is supported.) → stitch.withgoogle.com

English
66
22
306
31.7K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@807Arnav bruh fr, i used it and there's nothing consistent about it at alll
English
0
0
0
64
Arnav_807
Arnav_807@807Arnav·
People will use this and say they are product designers lol Just another day of new ai (shit) tool
Google AI@GoogleAI

Today, we’re evolving @StitchbyGoogle from @GoogleLabs into an AI design canvas transforms natural language prompts into production-ready front-end code. Some highlights from what’s new: 1. A complete redesign of the Stitch UI, which can now ingest multimodal references (text prompts, images, or code) as creative seeds for your design ideas 2. A brand new, context-aware design agent that can share feedback on builds, generate PRDs, and ask questions to better understand your vision. You can even talk to the agent if you prefer a verbal sounding board 3. A new agent-friendly markdown file, DESIGN.md, which you can use to export or import your design rules to or from other design and coding tools Whether you’ve been designing for decades or you’re whiteboarding your first software idea, Stitch can help you turn concepts into prototypes in minutes rather than days ➡️ stitch.withgoogle.com

English
4
0
39
4.2K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@hero_ui UPDATEE UR FIGMAA
English
1
0
0
67
rbk أُعيد تغريده
Aditi Shrivastava
Aditi Shrivastava@AditiS90·
If PhonePe can’t command the valuation or investor interest it wants despite dominating UPI payments, I worry about Zepto's IPO...
English
18
10
299
28.5K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@varundeepsaini saw ur resume, first time seeing ur profile but all the best bro, you got this
English
0
0
0
619
Varun Deep Saini
Varun Deep Saini@varundeepsaini·
This is either the biggest fumble or the biggest bag
Varun Deep Saini tweet media
English
42
14
1.5K
116K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@kusnizza create a video for the process
English
0
0
0
187
Vlad Kamelskii
Vlad Kamelskii@kusnizza·
I’m a designer, and I built this feature end to end in 1.5 weeks, from design to development, using AI the whole way. I didn’t even touch Figma. A few takeaways from this process: AI is incredible. For the first time in my career, I don’t have a middleman between the idea in my head and the final result. I can design things the way I want and deliver the quality I need. No more endless back and forth with developers over small visual fixes, missing states, or tiny UI details. I’m honestly so excited about this technology that I want to stop people on the street and talk about Codex. Yes, I use Codex. Its UI output is not great, but that doesn’t really matter for me. I design the UI myself from scratch anyway. Whether AI produces complete garbage or slightly better garbage is not the point, because my goal is still to make it perfect. I expect to adjust it heavily either way. When I work on a feature, I usually start in Plan mode. Since I’m not an engineer, I try to go deeper into the architecture, ask AI a lot of basic questions, and sometimes verify things with our developers. After a few rounds of planning, I move into implementation. To avoid silly mistakes and code style issues, our developers maintain an Agents.md file and a set of skills that help a lot. The first result usually has weak UI, but it can already be a very useful prototype. At that stage, I focus less on polish and more on UX: the flow, the behavior, and the overall logic of the feature. During that process, I try to give AI more “vision” so it can work more independently. I let it run tests, build the app, read dev server logs, and even check behavior in the browser using agent-browser CLI. It can literally open the app, click through it, and reproduce scenarios on its own to verify that things work. Once the architecture is in place, I move into UI polish step by step. That usually means very specific requests like: increase the margin to 4px, change the font size to 16px, add opacity to this container, and so on. At this stage, I rely heavily on React Grab, which lets me select an element in the browser and get its file path, so AI spends less time searching and more time fixing. One more really useful AI workflow: while working on our Style Guide feature, I needed to adjust design tokens across more than 200 components. Checking how those tokens behave across so many components would be painful in any tool, even in Figma. So I asked AI to build a temporary page inside our app with a canvas that displayed all components, grouped by category, with different prop variations. That gave me a fast way to see how the style guide applied everywhere at once and quickly spot problems. After every major iteration, I ask AI to review the code and check for edge cases and security issues. We also have a large test suite, which helps prevent breaking parts of the app outside the feature itself. If you want designers to ship code directly into production, the environment around them matters a lot. This feature took 1.5 weeks and touched hundreds of files. At the end, I asked AI to generate a big PDF report comparing the branch against main, summarizing what changed and explaining architecture decisions, so it would be easier for both AI and developers to review before merging. I’m still learning every day about AI and coding while designing features directly in the product. And honestly, I find it fascinating. I don’t really want to go back to the days when I had to design everything in an intermediate tool that doesn’t ship code.
English
3
0
102
29.7K
rbk أُعيد تغريده
Pietro Schirano
Pietro Schirano@skirano·
In a few days, we’re shipping something at @MagicPathAI that makes the dream of designing in code with perfect handoff, especially for large teams, finally real. I’ve been in this field for 20 years, and early in my career this would have felt like an ontological shock.
English
49
11
355
31.6K
Rahul
Rahul@rahulbhadoriiya·
Do you wanna see how I use AI to create UI from my Telegram?
English
12
0
19
10.1K
rbk أُعيد تغريده
Sakshi
Sakshi@Sakshi50038·
Swiggy is struggling to scale Instamart. So, they hired Bain and Company for 10 crore. They did extensive research for 3 months and suggested them to open offline stores. Apparently, an employee took paid version of ChatGPT and asked the same thing. And it also suggested to start offline stores. But then the CEO of Swiggy has worked for Bain earlier
English
98
215
6.2K
544K
Sorcerer
Sorcerer@SorcererTrading·
Deleting in 24 hrs, whoever Iikes and says “hello” we’ll send you a surprise dm! 🪄
English
4.4K
170
6.9K
372.3K
rbk
rbk@VRuoam·
@adriamatz have an idea similar to this, how do u create those graphics? if i get that sorted, im launchinggggg
English
1
0
1
47
Adrià Martinez
Adrià Martinez@adriamatz·
This stretching app makes $600K/mo → 100K downloads last month → 5 min daily routines → TikTok is just flexible girls doing splits But every video shows someone ALREADY flexible. Show a stiff guy's real journey. That's the untapped angle. What are you waiting for?
Adrià Martinez@adriamatz

Stop building the next ChatGPT wrapper. A color by numbers app makes $20K/mo. → AI generates every image → Marketing is just TikTok slideshows → The whole thing runs on autopilot The money is in boring apps nobody wants to build.

English
19
19
343
80.7K
priya upadhyay
priya upadhyay@Priya_Upadhyay_·
My project is 80% ready, but as soon as I started testing, Cursor asked for an upgrade. 🥲
priya upadhyay tweet media
English
11
0
19
1K