Loïck

136 posts

Loïck

Loïck

@loickm

Design, travel, photography & music. Building @choose_official / Built @mustseeapp @whyd

Paris, France Beigetreten Mayıs 2009
456 Folgt260 Follower
Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
Pour l'activer : 1. Saisis : chrome://flags/#vertical-tabs dans la barre d'adresse 2. Active l’option 3. Redémarre Chrome 4. Fais un clic droit sur la barre des onglets 5. Sélectionne "Déplacer les onglets sur le côté"
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
Pour les anciens fans d’Arc : la dernière version de Google Chrome permet d’activer les onglets verticaux :)
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@MeetAiqi @lennysan @jenny_wen @AnthropicAI Yes, I feel the same way. With Claude Code I can explore solutions more easily. The nuance probably comes from the scope. I feel like I can more easily explore micro-interactions.
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Aiqi Liu
Aiqi Liu@MeetAiqi·
Great episode! 👏 On #9: I agree that exploring multiple designs is key, but coding tools are actually solving this now. I’ve been using Claude Code to quickly spin up a canvas to visualize different design directions at the same time. I beats Figma because the output is immediately interactive. Sharing the recording I sent Jenny so you can see what I mean!
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Lenny Rachitsky
Lenny Rachitsky@lennysan·
My biggest takeaways from @jenny_wen (design lead at @AnthropicAI): 1. The traditional design process is breaking down. The classic discover-diverge-converge loop that designers have relied on for years doesn’t work when engineers can spin up seven coding agents and ship a working version before a designer finishes exploring options. 2. Design work is splitting into two distinct modes. The first is supporting execution: consulting with engineers as they build, giving feedback, polishing in code. The second is setting short-range vision, now scoped to three to six months instead of multi-year roadmaps. The vision work is still critical because when everyone can build anything fast, someone needs to point the team in a coherent direction. 3. Build trust through speed, not perfection. Anthropic ships products early, labels them research previews, and then iterates publicly based on real feedback. Jenny argues that what actually degrades a brand isn’t launching something rough; it’s launching something rough and then going silent. If you ship fast, respond to feedback visibly, and keep improving, users will trust you more, not less. 4. The most overlooked hire in design right now is the cracked new grad. Most companies are hiring senior designers with deep experience. Jenny argues that early-career people with blank slates, fast learning curves, and no attachment to legacy processes may be uniquely suited to this moment. They don’t carry baked-in rituals that are now obsolete, and their lack of expectations can actually be an advantage. 5. Chat as an interface isn’t going away. Despite expectations that chatbots were a temporary stop on the way to richer UIs, Jenny sees chat as a permanently valuable interface because it offers infinite flexibility. But she expects a hybrid future where models increasingly generate UI elements on the fly for specific tasks (like the interactive widgets Claude recently shipped) while chat remains the connective tissue between them. 6. Jenny went from design director (12 to 15 reports) back to IC. She questioned whether middle management had a safe future and wanted hands-on time during a period of rapid change. The IC time is giving her hard skills she wouldn’t have gained while managing. 7. AI will likely get better at taste and judgment. Jenny says designers may be holding onto “taste” as a moat too tightly. But someone still has to be accountable for what ships, the same way an engineer is accountable for AI-generated code. 8. Hire three archetypes: strong generalists, deep specialists, and “cracked new grads.” Strong generalists are “block-shaped” (80th percentile across multiple skills). Deep specialists are top 10% in one area. Cracked new grads—the most overlooked—have no baked-in processes and learn new tools fastest. 9. Figma is still essential, but for different reasons than before. Jenny says Figma remains the best tool for rapidly exploring 8 to 10 different design directions on a canvas, something that coding tools handle poorly because they’re too linear and create investment bias toward one direction. For micro-level visual and interaction decisions, spatial exploration still beats sequential iteration. 10. Low-leverage work is often the highest-leverage thing a manager can do. Jenny pushes back on the conventional management advice to ruthlessly prioritize only high-leverage tasks. She points to leaders who obsessively dogfood the product, repro bugs, and personally fix small issues—activities that seem “below” a senior leader but create deep product familiarity, set a cultural tone of care, and earn trust from the team in ways that strategic planning never can. Watch our full conversation: youtube.com/watch?v=eh8bcB…
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YouTube
Lenny Rachitsky@lennysan

Design lead for Claude: The classic design process is dead. Here's what's replacing it. Jenny Wen (@jenny_wen) leads design for Claude at @AnthropicAI, was previously director of design at @Figma, and a designer at @Dropbox, @Square, and @Shopify. In our in-depth conversation, we discuss: 🔸 Why the classic discovery → mock → iterate design process is becoming obsolete 🔸 What a day in the life of a designer at Anthropic looks like, including her AI tool stack 🔸 Whether AI will eventually surpass humans in taste and judgment 🔸 Why Jenny left a director role at Figma to return to IC work 🔸 The three archetypes Jenny is hiring for now This conversation changed how I think about the future of design. Listen now 👇 youtu.be/eh8bcBIAAFo

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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@stephenhaney Congrats for the launch! I’ve been testing since this morning the feature that lets you go from Figma to Paper. I’m running into issues with the icons: the dimensions aren’t being preserved, and they’re being converted to images instead of staying as SVGs. Do you know why? (1/2)
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Stephen Haney
Stephen Haney@stephenhaney·
Hello! Today we're releasing Paper Desktop Paper is now a canvas for Cursor, Claude Code, Codex. Any agent can read and write html to Paper. • push or pull from your codebase • pull real data from anywhere • less work, more design What will you ship? Sound on 🎶
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@ctatedev Nice. How can I use it for react native for my iOS app?
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Chris Tate
Chris Tate@ctatedev·
New: Autonomous Dogfooding A skill for agent-browser that uses your app the way your users do → Point it at any URL → Explores pages, clicks buttons, fills forms → Tests edge cases and checks the console → Captures repro videos and step-by-step screenshots → Outputs a structured report with severity ratings No test scripts. No manual QA.
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@jerryjliu0 This is very exciting. Now the ICs are prioritizing the work. That’s great, but how do you make sure the right things are actually getting prioritized? Who sets the direction?
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Jerry Liu
Jerry Liu@jerryjliu0·
Coding agents are fundamentally changing software engineering in terms of velocity, role, and org structure. We published a memo to our internal engineering team detailing our growing expectations in terms of role/scope. 🟠 Before, the tasks of prioritization, engineering planning, and implementation were divided between EMs, PMs, senior ICs, and junior ICs 🟢 Now, ICs are expected to handle *all* of product prioritization, product speccing, and implementation This is due to a few trends 📈: - Coding agents have brought implementation costs down to ~0. The role of engineers is writing prompts - LLMs and sub-agents have reduced the PM work of synthesizing feedback down to ~0 too The main job of any “engineer” is to be an e2e product owner: being able to translate requirements into specifications, and delegate tasks to various subagents for implementation. Every engineer is told to offload as much as possible to their favorite tools, whether it’s Claude Code, Cursor, Devin, Codex, regular ChatGPT and more. We celebrate and share learnings around burning tokens, as long as it helps drive additional productivity!
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@riggs_trenton @RayDalio Very cool, much easier to read! Can you share the prompt to get this kind of result?
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@patricecassard @gonzague @WisprFlow @omartineau Très puissant. Perso j'ai basculé sur du 100% local avec l'app Spokenly (gratuite) en utilisant le modèle Nvidia Parakeet Tdt 0.6B V3. Aussi puissant que Wisprflow.
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Drew
Drew@drewocarr·
or just generate it from your phone 🫡
mike nøl@myconull

@drewocarr Wait… this can generate Shortcuts with Claude, and it syncs to your phone?

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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@mattcassinelli Agree with you. However, until Apple makes it easy to access a place where you can specify what you’d like in the Shortcuts interface, I don’t see how a non-tech-savvy person is going to set automations easily.
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@patricecassard D’accord avec toi. Il n’a jamais été aussi facile de créer des produits,et c’est tant mieux. Finalement, le vrai défi, comme dit @naval, est la distribution : “First-time founders focus on product, second-time founders focus on distribution.”
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Micah Alpern
Micah Alpern@malpern·
Exciting! And super design high talent density. I’m excited to see your take on identify management in 2026. Id love for Gmail to default to my work identify and YouTube to default to my personal. Sorry to ask you to make up for googles identify limitations but thems the breaks of being a browser.
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Josh Miller
Josh Miller@joshm·
Big news: Apple’s lead Safari designer just joined @browsercompany. Alongside @charliedeets, that means we now have the lead designers from every Safari era that overlapped with Arc and Dia (2020 to 2025). We’re not fucking around this year — 2026 will be our biggest yet 🏀
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Stitch by Google
Stitch by Google@stitchbygoogle·
Shipmas Day 2: Bonus Drop. 🚢🎁 We taught Nano Banana Pro to see like a user. 👀 Introducing Predictive Heatmaps. Now you can run an instant attention audit on any screen you design. Ensure your users are focused exactly where you want them to be—before you write a line of code and without waiting for data. Live now in the Generate menu.
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369 Labs
369 Labs@369labsx·
I’ve got too many DMs asking about this So I made a simple free guide: Turn any reference image into JSON Reply “JSON” to get access (must be following)
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scott belsky
scott belsky@scottbelsky·
@nikitabier when you’re done with global transparency and world peace, would love to use a grok agent to leverage / talk to all the stuff i’ve bookmarked on X over the last decade. pls thx 🙏
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@amix3k Super excited to try it out. Where is the alpha? Happy customer since 2019 :)
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Amir Salihefendić
Amir Salihefendić@amix3k·
I'm incredibly excited about what's coming next for Todoist: Agents ✨. We're shifting from simply helping you manage your work to actually getting it done for you. What we are attempting is quite ambitious/crazy, and many things can still go wrong, but if it works out, it will be revolutionary.
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Ben Springwater
Ben Springwater@benspringwater·
Cat's out of the bag ◡̈ Over the past six months, we've been quietly working on a second app! Halo is a habits app for iOS with a companion AI habits coach (think: "James Clear in your pocket"*). We just started beta testing and are hustling to get into the app store ASAP, probably next month. Reply here if you'd like to help beta test (soon) or be notified about general availability (October). *credit to @gregisenberg for this tagline
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Chase Stubblefield@chasestubb

breaking news to you (I have not been authorized to share this 😬) the team that built @matter is cooking on a habit-building app that is designed with incredible product intuition and DOES NOT fail. this ai coach just texts you - perfectly integrated with the ios app

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Pietro Schirano
Pietro Schirano@skirano·
“Put this shirt on him” Gemini 2.5 Flash Image Previously nano-banana
Pietro Schirano tweet mediaPietro Schirano tweet mediaPietro Schirano tweet media
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Loïck
Loïck@loickm·
@Shpigford Linear, BigQuery, iMessage :)
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Josh Pigford
Josh Pigford@Shpigford·
claude code users: what are the most impactful MCPs you regularly use?
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