Today we're exploring why waiting for a perfect product might actually be a liability in the age of AI. And we'll hear how true UX maturity feels less like adding new skills and more like unlearning the assumptions we've held for years.
In This Episode
Today's Feed tackles a tension between perfection and speed, while asking what wisdom looks like when tools vanishWaiting for a perfect product is now a liability because AI slashes the cost of course correctionWhile toolsets have a shelf life, wisdom remains evergreen as designers ageSmall teams remain the most effective unit for product development, even as AI augments individual capabilitiesAlso publishing recently: Smashing Magazine, UX Planet, and Nielsen Norman GroupIn r/UXResearch, a thread titled "The most uncomfortable insight I've had as a UX researcher," sparked a real look at messy realityArticles Mentioned
Today's Feed tackles a tension between perfection and speed, while asking what wisdom looks like when tools vanish.Waiting for a perfect product is now a liability because AI slashes the cost of course correction. Jeff Gothelf argues this in a piece called "AI rewards provisional decisions, not perfect ones," where he suggests leaders make provisional commitments aligned with human goals. He notes that while enterprise constraints exist, AI coding agents allow teams to deploy fixes in minutes. That rewrites the assumption that we need certainty before shipping work.While toolsets have a shelf life, wisdom remains evergreen as designers age. Darren Yeo explores this in "The wisdom curve," at UX Design.cc, by profiling a seventy-year-old colleague who pivoted from woodcraft to EdTech. He urges professionals to move past ego-driven success toward Maslow's sixth level of self-transcendence. This shift means focusing on altruism and mentoring rather than just technical mastery.Small teams remain the most effective unit for product development, even as AI augments individual capabilities. The author argues this in "Small Teams Win, Again," at LukeW, citing how teams of under five people achieved significant results before AI existed. Larger teams often suffer from decision-making bottlenecks that AI doesn't solve. Instead, highly capable systems likely mean we need fewer people to build products quickly.Also publishing recently: Smashing Magazine, UX Planet, and Nielsen Norman Group.Community Discussions
In r/UXResearch, a thread titled "The most uncomfortable insight I've had as a UX researcher," sparked a real look at messy reality. One user shared designing for a store card application where people apply on mobile while multitasking on a bus. They noted, "Twice in my career I've had to design for use in 'not ideal' conditions." That specific constraint of testing on a moving bus versus an offshore oil rig really highlights where real work happens. Wait-wait - which one of you did design for someone on an oil rig? That’s so cool!Over in r/UXDesign, the conversation around "UX maturity feels less like adding skills and more like unlearning assumptions," is hitting hard. People are realizing that growth isn't just about stacking new tools but stripping away old habits. It's a sharp reminder that sometimes you have to forget what you think you know to actually move forward.There's also a lively debate in r/Design asking "WTF is Taste?" while another thread in r/UXDesign argues that the work feels more like "decision-making under constraints" than pure design. One commenter put it bluntly, saying, "decision-making without constraints would be art." That divide between art and problem-solving is where the real tension lives for many practitioners.It sure does seem like we’re hitting the down swing on the mood pendulum in the community lately.The Take
[FEED] So here is the tension that kept nagging me today: we're told AI lets us ship imperfect work fast, but the community says design is really just decision-making under constraintsAnnouncement
Chicago Camps is hosting UX Camp Summer on Saturday, May 30th. There's an open call for speakers so submit your idea today! It's an online event, so you can join from anywhere in the world!
Tickets are free, thanks to the generosity of the community! If it's within your budget, you can purchase a general admission ticket for only thirteen dollars and fifty cents.
Get tickets now at Chicago Camps dot org.
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.