Chris Aalid

2.7K posts

Chris Aalid banner
Chris Aalid

Chris Aalid

@chrisaalid

design @instagram. previously Apartment List, Trek. [email protected]

Seattle, WA Katılım Mayıs 2009
3.6K Takip Edilen2.8K Takipçiler
Lauren LoPrete
Lauren LoPrete@laurenloprete·
First day at @mercury Back to eating pickles over the sink between meetings ✌️
English
5
0
61
4.3K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@Jaytel Apparently the design studio can not stop cooking, damn
English
0
0
3
367
Jaytel
Jaytel@Jaytel·
I built myself a chrome extension called Pose Any clothing model of any store becomes me. Each brand still conveys their brand aesthetic, but I can quickly understand how something would look on me.
English
217
102
3.6K
339.2K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@samsheffer the softer curve sides though are kind of great (as much as I think the iPhone 4/4s is the goat)
English
0
0
1
154
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@andyhennie It’d be sick if multiple windows (say, chrome) could have their own entries in the dock for different purposes
English
1
0
1
708
Hennie
Hennie@andyhennie·
I just created a sidebar Dock for MacOS, and it feels amazing to use. Every app has a vertical sidebar these days, why doesn't the OS itself have it?
English
71
5
217
788.2K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@localghost Those kinds of feedback signals have always been super noisy on any product imo
English
0
0
2
3K
Aaron Ng
Aaron Ng@localghost·
Watched a normal person use ChatGPT and I am pretty confident everybody is picking from the RLHF options at random
English
37
4
1.1K
120.9K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@bengold I’ve dealt with this all my life and it’s tough. DMs open if you want to talk or anything.
English
1
0
5
283
Ben Gold
Ben Gold@bengold·
I’m pretty depressed and I’m not sure how to get myself out of it.
English
20
1
31
4.2K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@pratikbodkhe @amfonte @PrincipleApp At some point framer pivoted away from fast, hi-fi prototyping into slower but more system-driven react, and then fully into site builder (turns out that market is a lot bigger than product designers who wanted to go deep into prototyping at the time)
English
0
0
0
39
sam henri gold
sam henri gold@samhenrigold·
sorry to cuss but what in tarnation
sam henri gold tweet media
English
30
15
588
28K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@abigailreadey I find sometimes screenshotting inner frames of just parts of the ui helps a lot to nail the details vs just linking an entire full frame from figma
English
0
0
0
140
Abigail Augustine (Readey)
Abigail Augustine (Readey)@abigailreadey·
FYI designers: I find I get better outputs with screenshots than with Figma MCP. Don't stress about it.
English
11
1
21
3.1K
Anthony
Anthony@amfonte·
@chrisaalid @PrincipleApp Yea, it’s pretty irrelevant now that we have AI. That’s been the new game changer. Not as fun though since I’m just using my words to guide the prototype. Haha
English
1
0
0
17
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@amfonte @PrincipleApp Principle was so good. Then I got into framer back when it was coffeescript. Then origami! Now lately SwiftUI prototypes with cursor or Claude.
English
2
0
0
26
Michael Luo
Michael Luo@AzianMike·
I like working at @stripe because most people are smarter than me, which means I learn a lot from them.
English
3
0
18
1.2K
Mills Baker
Mills Baker@millsbaker·
The toxicity issue at Facebook stemmed in my view from the absence of there being any other game to play there; there were few sincere, sustained technical missions (and those that existed created orgs with less toxicity); indeed, there were few missions of any kind!
Jeremy Bernier@jeremybernier

Meta was easily the most toxic company I've worked for. There's a reason the Chinese call it "Squid Game". Others refer to it as "Hunger Games" or "Lord of the Flies". I think they're all accurate. The company culture is basically every man/woman for themselves. The performance review process (PSC) not only doesn't incentivize helping others, if anything it actually discourages it since everyone is stack ranked against each other. Imagine working on a team where every 6 months, one of you is going to get axed. Of course it's going to become toxic. "Bottoms up" culture is a complete farce - it's just a way for leadership to offload accountability. The Tech Leads (TLs) have all the power - owning the relationships and tribal knowledge to gatekeep projects to their buddies. Managers are "people managers" with limited technical understanding, who basically aggregate TL feedback and create performance review packets to calibrate with other managers and IC7+. The takeaway is that your destiny is in the hands of the TLs, and TLs unlike managers have no responsibility for your career. There are no repercussions for unethical behavior. I've seen managers and TLs throw others under the bus and get away with it. The only mission bonding the company together is individual self-preservation. Save your own ass to survive for another stock vesting, and throw someone else under the bus if you need to. That's why layoffs rarely impact directors/VPs or tenured IC7+ despite the fact that they're paid by far the most. Even this recent mass layoff that was supposed to "flatten" managers layers barely affected directors/VPs/IC7+, and fell predominantly on M1s - the lowest rung of the management chain. The culture is extremely performative and focused on box ticking and optics. Everything is about PSC (the performance review system) and perception. This means tons of meetings, useless AI slop posts, and top-down initiatives that don't benefit anyone but maybe help tick off the impact box of some go-getter at the top. Impact is not enough - it has to have sufficient complexity. So complexity is added for complexity's sake. The org I was in (Facebook ads) is 90% Chinese, and the entire leadership chain up to the VP level is Chinese. Mandarin is the primary language at the office, except in official meetings with non-speakers. Chinese work culture is very different from American work culture, with 996 (9am-9pm, 6 days/week), top-down nature, emphasis on saving face (eg. don't question your superiors), and toxicity being quite common. Naturally when an org is completely dominated by a single ethnicity that's notorious for not integrating, elements from their work culture seep in. Of the layoffs I witnessed in this org, 3/4 were not Chinese (just to be clear, most Chinese are very kind so don't take this as an attack. But it is a reality that I think most people outside this company are completely unaware of, and I question if leadership is even aware despite the fact that we're talking about the company HQ) I had the most toxic manager of my life here. I watched him deliberately set up a new hire to fail, driving them to needing to see a psychiatrist for anxiety + depression, and getting them fired. Then he suddenly disappeared for 8 months, before leaving the company. I could go on and on, but this is already pretty long and I think you get the point. Yes there are a lot of great, kind people here. I managed to transfer out of my first team into a new team with a great manager where everyone was very smart, supportive, and hardworking. But the company has its Squid Game reputation for a reason. Company culture comes from the top. It seems leadership is either too removed to notice, or maybe don't really care anymore because I guess they already made their billions and us plebs are expendable these days.

English
4
4
268
57.1K
Pieter Korevaar
Pieter Korevaar@ppkorevaar·
There is such a big disconnect between what the industry thinks is a great onboarding experience vs. how users actually use a product for the first time.
English
6
0
13
1.5K
Chris Aalid
Chris Aalid@chrisaalid·
@cyanhex It’s funny how easy it is to over complicate that stuff
English
1
0
1
43
sean
sean@cyanhex·
the people telling us we had to code or use framer / origami / etc etc etc now will tell us to use Claude like X or your process is COOKED do not listen. there are millions of ways to design/build, and ai will get better and better at honing its capabilities to work w you
English
3
2
26
889
Adam Whitcroft
Adam Whitcroft@AdamWhitcroft·
The design team @owner is cooking, and we're looking for more design-builders to join the team. We're building tools to keep your local independent restaurants open and thriving, and there's a lot to do. Come and work with us. DMs open.
Darrin Henein@darrinhenein

A few weeks ago we launched a new brand for @owner — an evolution that much better represents the incredible mission and technology that we're building. This was one of the first initiatives I lead as CDO here and was an amazing process in collaboration with @thenickpattison and his talented team at Primary. We couldn't be more proud of how we now show up in the world. Owner has now driven over $1,000,000,000 in sales for local restaurants, and that growth is compounding every week. We've been on a hiring streak and have welcomed some insane talent to the design team in the last few months, and we're looking to bring on a few more builders — designers who sweat the details and can bring their ideas to life. Apply through our careers page if this sounds like you!

English
11
6
116
23.4K
Brian Lovin
Brian Lovin@brian_lovin·
@samlambert Don't forget the Hidden tab, lots of high quality connections buried in there
Brian Lovin tweet media
English
11
0
51
3.9K
Sam Lambert
Sam Lambert@samlambert·
fucking hell. i just remembered that X has a hidden inbox. i've been ignoring people for months.
English
20
0
153
14.5K