The Feed & The Thread

The Feed & The Thread - April 17, 2026


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We question whether our systems can truly handle the messiness of reality when Peter Zakrzewski exposes AI's failure at spatial reasoning and Victor Amejimaobari argues that your module choice dictates your team's future. While Corentin Bernadou shows how sharing experimental failures deepens our motion design, we also confront the gap between high-fidelity visuals and the fragile interactions they often hide. From the tension of displaying dense legal data on tiny screens to the absurdity of AI-generated job descriptions still demanding Adobe XD, we explore if our tools are serving the user or just satisfying the builder.

From The Feed
  • Oh, but there’s one more thing (Peter (Zak) Zakrzewski) — AI fails at stable spatial reasoning because it lacks the embodied grounding required for true design practice.
  • The Art of Complex Motion: Corentin Bernadou’s World of Shaders and Experimentation (Corentin Bernadou) — Sharing experimental shader failures accelerates skill acquisition and unlocks unique interaction possibilities.
  • A Well-Designed JavaScript Module System is Your First Architecture Decision (Amejimaobari Victor) — Selecting a module system is a foundational architectural decision that shapes application boundaries and team structure.
  • From The Thread
    • Elegantly display clusters of grouped data in mobile app? (r/UI_Design) — Mobile screens force designers to prioritize information hierarchy over raw data volume to avoid visual clutter.
    • 3d world map (r/UI_Design) — Chasing high-fidelity visuals often creates fragile systems that fail to handle real-world interaction effectively.
    • I built a design tool to better handle responsive layouts. Would love feedback on whether this is solving a real UX problem. (r/UXDesign) — Custom tools must be evaluated to see if they solve real problems or merely patch broken workflows in mainstream software.
    • A recruiter just asked for my Adobe XD experience. I had to pull up a 3-year-old Reddit post to make sure I wasn't losing my mind. (r/UXDesign) — AI-generated job descriptions are hallucinating outdated tool requirements because they fail to understand the current design landscape.
    • working faster without overthinking (r/UXDesign) — Clients value functional solutions achieved through rapid prototyping far more than pixel-perfect perfection.
    • Today's Notable Articles
      • Autopilot, agentic AI, and the dangers of imperfect metaphors — Tom Seiple
      • Build to Learn vs Build to Earn — Marty Cagan
      • I watched the manosphere documentary; here is how design is making things worse. — Maria Teresa Stella
      • Today's Notable Discussions
        • Would ChatGPT be as disruptive if it wasn't producing a new output every time but was deterministic. The first time amaze experience on regenerate button? — r/UXDesign
        • rupee pinching(swindling) racket — r/UXDesign
        • The rupee pinching(swindling) racket — r/uxwriting
        • I wanted a mood tracker that just tracked moods and made it really obvious and easy, as opposed to apps on the store that have 10,000 features. This UI is exactly what I envisioned, but it doesn't look "professional" to me. How can I improve this without abandoning "simple, easy, obvious"? — r/UI_Design
        • About The Feed & The Thread

          The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.

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          The Feed & The ThreadBy Chicago Camps