Are design systems just a bandaid, Figma tips for UI3, building better logins

Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.

UX Collective Editors
Bootcamp
4 min readSep 2, 2024

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“A community, often an underserved one, is struggling with a problem. A designer sees this, observes them for a short period, comes up with an idea in the studio, and then comes back with a solution to the bewilderment and excitement of the community. The problem that no one has been able to figure out before now is solved! All thanks to the designer!

Ok, this story might seem a little exaggerated, but it has long been a documented one.

Projects like these often do little to help the communities they target, but instead raise the profile of the designer(s)/agency(ies) that made them. And years later, when the projects go inevitably wrong, the publicity has already been gained, and communities are left with little resources to hold them accountable.”

To be a designer is to be a facilitator
By Marielle Sam-Wall

Editor picks

The UX Collective is an independent design publication that elevates unheard design voices and helps designers think more critically about their work.

Make me think

  • Things to do before asking “Is this accessible?”
    “It is not uncommon for someone to message, call, email, or carrier pigeon me to ask if something is accessible. They almost invariably want a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ However, I need to understand what the heck they mean and what the other-heck prompted them to ask.”
  • iOS18 Photos: tab bar to single scroll view
    “The most significant user interface change from iOS 17 to iOS 18 are the navigation differences in Apple’s Photos app. The ubiquitous tab bar that’s become the default navigation model in mobile apps is gone, and in its place is one long scrolling page. So how does it work and why?”
  • Screen apnea: What happens to our breath when we type, tap, scroll
    “In 2007, former Microsoft executive Linda Stone noticed something strange happening every time she’d sit down to answer emails. She was holding her breath. Stone wondered how common this was and set out to investigate using ‘kitchen table science,’ as she called it.”

Tools and resources

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