The UX Research and Design Blog
My practical expert insights and curated content (resources, tools, etc.) on UX research, inclusive design, enterprise UX, accessibility, and more, to help you growth as a designer.
Pixels of the Week – January 6, 2019
UX, UI and Front-End ressources: how to learn CSS, UX (fun) predictions for 2019, UI design advice and trends, some cool videos on game mechanics and game development, responsive design process, nice book illustrations and CSS pattern inspiration, some tutorials on CSS gradients and SVG and a prototyping tool.
Pixels of the Week – December 23, 2018
Your dose of weekly UX, UI and Front-End ressources: consistency in design, why HTML is not just spans and divs, designing for accessibility, design systems digest, UX diagrams, form usability, CSS gradients tool, frameworks, CSS discomfort, tools for UX designers, illustration tips, color advice, Safari and Firefox release notes, free fonts, an icon game and more
Pixels of the Week – December 16 , 2018
Your weekly dose of UX, UI and Front-End ressources: thoughts on front-end and JS gatekeepers, design options, debug CSS, typography ressources and free fonts, building a great portfolio, prototype in code, shadow DOM, UI & UX trends, design 404 pages, naming colors in CSS and in design tools, design tools survey, accessibility, CSS, risk of homogeneous web with browser uniformisation, etc.
Pixels of the Week – December 9, 2018
UX, UI and Front-End ressources: two games to train your designer eye, things that people forget to design, state of UX for 2019, empathy, user experience of chatbots, icon design, behaviour influence, CSS resets, JS and accessibility, a guide to PWAs, dev tools for designers, dark color scheme in CSS, CSS environment variables, front-end is not a problem to solve and so much more.
Pixels of the Week – November 25, 2018
You weekly dose of UX, UI and Front-End ressources and articles: UX and gamification, mobile push mistakes, mental models, PWAs, learning design, building user flows, check-out UX, building color palettes, design debug tool, personas, CSS in React components, cute icons, ordering CSS properties, tools and scripts for AI, machine learning, indeweb and performance.
Pixels of the Week – November 11, 2018
Weekly curated UX, UI and Front-End ressources: accessibility for beginners, accessible color palette tools, ressources to design for colorblind people, inclusive design, UX of notifications, CSS and filters demos, redesign for dark mode, building design systems, CSS HSL colors, CSS grid areas, futur of information architecture and more.
Pixels of the Week – November 4, 2018
UX, UI and Front-End ressources: UX and Agile, user flows and wireframes, DNA of a Design, beautiful illustrations, PWA revenue lift, design thinking critics, CSS Grid and Media queries, text styles overrides in Sketch 52, mobile app screenshots, designing for better user choice and more.
Pixels of the Week – October 28, 2018
UX, UI and Front-End ressources: Styleguide documentation, Microinteractions in User Experience, humor and UX, confession of a flawed designer, improving chatbots, Skeleton screens study, usability and innovation, UX writing, design search experience, 30 second CSS snippets, learning Adobe XD in 5 minutes, and more.
Pixels of the Week – October 14, 2018
Your dose of weekly curated UX, UI and Front-End ressources: micro-interactions, accessibility and colors, horizontal scrolling, readability and inclusive design, modals on the web, CSS grid, birthday forms fields, buttons in HTML, how we interact with CSS, iOS icons scaling, designing perceptions, productivity and much more.
Secret Super powers of Mobile Browsers – Techfest Bucharest
This content is 7 years old. Remember that the following content might be outdated.Today I was speaking at Techfest in Bucharest. It’s a 4 days event around web and technologies. My talk was about mobile browsers secret powers. In this talk, I go through a lot of different APIs you can now (or in a near future) use to enhance user experience in mobile browsers and bring it to the almost the level of native apps. Did you know you …