New Alpha: Prompt to Edit Your Figma Designs (1 minute read)
Figma has launched an alpha feature that allows users to edit designs through written prompts, enabling bulk edits, content additions, resizing, and UI variations. The tool can redesign multiple frames simultaneously, insert images and text, generate mobile versions, and create new components from scratch. Access is limited to 5,000 users on paid plans who apply for early testing.
|
Kuo: Apple to launch touch screen Macs, starting with OLED MacBook Pro (2 minute read)
Apple is planning to launch touch-screen Macs, beginning with an OLED MacBook Pro expected to enter production in late 2026. This new model will likely be powered by M6 chips and feature both OLED display technology and touch capability, marking a major functional shift toward iPad-like interaction. Apple may also extend touch support to future MacBook Air models, reflecting broader trends in consumer expectations for touch-enabled devices.
|
YouTube Unveils New Ways for Creators to Warn with Brand Deals, YouTube Shopping Program (2 minute read)
YouTube announced new monetization features at its Made on YouTube event, including swappable brand sponsorship slots in long-form videos and AI-powered product tagging that automatically displays tags when products are mentioned. The platform is expanding its Shopping program to more creators and markets, such as Brazil, and adding major retailers, with gross merchandise volume growing 5x year-over-year. YouTube also introduced brand links for Shorts creators and will proactively suggest creator-brand partnerships through its hub in Google Ads.
|
|
iPhone Air review: The thinnest iPhone ever, but at what cost? (22 minute read)
The iPhone Air marks Apple's most radical iPhone redesign since the iPhone X, delivering a record-thin 5.6 mm titanium body, light weight, and a striking new βplateauβ housing for its components. It pairs the A19 Pro chip, new Apple-designed modem, and Wi-Fi 7 support with strong durability upgrades, but compromises on cameras, offering only a single 48MP main lens and no Telephoto or Ultra-Wide options.
|
Why Designing for Users Who Don't Know They Have a Problem Matters (5 minute read)
Problem-unaware users often fail to recognize issues with their current workflows, instead viewing struggles as personal failings rather than systemic problems that solutions could address. Designers can help these users by surfacing problems through behavioral triggers, social proof, and before-and-after comparisons that demonstrate real-world benefits tied to specific scenarios. Successfully converting problem-unaware audiences represents significant growth potential since they typically constitute the largest group of potential users for most products.
|
Functional Personas with AI: A Lean, Practical Workflow (9 minute read)
Traditional demographic personas are ineffective for UX work, as they focus on irrelevant details like age and income rather than user tasks and goals. Functional personas center on what people are trying to accomplish, their questions, pain points, and service gaps, using AI to synthesize existing data like surveys and analytics. This AI-assisted workflow enables teams to create lightweight, actionable personas that directly inform design decisions and can be updated regularly without extensive research cycles.
|
|
Checklist Design (Website)
Good checklists capture only the most essential steps, freeing mental space for creativity and problem-solving. Designer George Hatzis created Checklist Design to help makers work more efficiently and consistently.
|
Screenshot to Demo Video (Website)
With Bazaar, you can upload screenshots of your app and describe how it should animate, and it will generate a video within a few seconds.
|
|
50 fonts that will be popular with designers in 2026 (19 minute read)
Typography continues to evolve, with designers reviving classics and creating bold new typefaces. This post highlights 50 fonts set to dominate 2026. The list blends retro-inspired serifs with modern grotesques, showcasing both fresh releases and enduring favourites like GT America, SΓΆhne, Graphik, Aeonik, and Neue Montreal, reflecting a design community drawn to both innovation and familiar comfort.
|
Artists are Losing Work, Wages, and Hope as Bosses and Clients Embrace AI (33 minute read)
Visual artists, illustrators, and graphic designers are experiencing significant job losses as companies increasingly embrace AI-generated imagery to cut costs. While AI output is often deemed "good enough" by clients despite quality issues, it's leading to disappearing work opportunities, lower wages, and declining demand for traditional creative skills across industries, from advertising to entertainment. The impact extends beyond just lost income, with many artists reporting severe psychological distress from seeing their life's work devalued and their artistic identity undermined.
|
Voice and Immersive Interfaces: Preparing Your Product for the Future of UX (3 minute read)
Voice and immersive interfaces are transitioning from novelty features to operational necessities, with major organizations like NHS trusts, Tesla, and Boeing already implementing them to enhance productivity and user experience. These technologies excel where traditional interfaces struggle, enabling hands-free interaction, improving accessibility for users with disabilities, and providing spatial understanding for complex tasks. Companies should audit their most common user actions for voice potential and adopt voice-first thinking, as users increasingly expect more intuitive, contextual, and human-like digital interactions.
|
|
Love TLDR? Tell your friends and get rewards!
|
Share your referral link below with friends to get free TLDR swag!
|
|
Track your referrals here.
|
Want to advertise in TLDR? π°
If your company is interested in reaching an audience of design professionals and decision makers, you may want to advertise with us.
Want to work at TLDR? πΌ
Apply here or send a friend's resume to jobs@tldr.tech and get $1k if we hire them!
If you have any comments or feedback, just respond to this email!
Thanks for reading,
Jae Lee, Matej Latin & Ralph Brinker
|
|
|
|