Honest Feedback: This post seems very low effort and obviously ChatGPT. The Smart. Adaptive. Human. for example and then what hurts the most is the Invisible UX isn’t less interface.
It’s just perfectly-timed interface.
The it isnt x, its y trope of AI is in every post now and I am very dissapointed to see that yours is the same... I will stay on for one more but if it is the same I'll unsubscribe.
100% agree with you Felix! It reminds me of something I shared a while back about the expectations users bring into every experience now - they’re no longer just comparing your product to direct competitors - they're comparing it to ChatGPT and Spotify: tools that learn, predict, and adapt.
You’re absolutely right. We went through the whole process of adapting our products to the limitations of technology, like mobile or just responsive design. We pushed past all the language and component styling issues, using all sorts of browser hacks to get the content and layout right. But somehow, we got stuck when it came to adapting to the human - the main, and only real, user of the product.
It’s funny when you think about it. Even though we talk about personalised experiences, they’re still limited by a fixed number of possibilities and overly complex logic. So we just rely on the user figuring it out or clicking through.
That limitation is finally being lifted with AI. We can start creating products that are more human-oriented 🙂 based on different mental models, as the cost of implementing complex logic continues to decrease.
Honest Feedback: This post seems very low effort and obviously ChatGPT. The Smart. Adaptive. Human. for example and then what hurts the most is the Invisible UX isn’t less interface.
It’s just perfectly-timed interface.
The it isnt x, its y trope of AI is in every post now and I am very dissapointed to see that yours is the same... I will stay on for one more but if it is the same I'll unsubscribe.
100% agree with you Felix! It reminds me of something I shared a while back about the expectations users bring into every experience now - they’re no longer just comparing your product to direct competitors - they're comparing it to ChatGPT and Spotify: tools that learn, predict, and adapt.
And invisible design is what enables that kind of intelligence. I unpacked that over here, if helpful: https://open.substack.com/pub/karozieminski/p/user-personas-are-dead-ai-powered
Curious- do you think we’ve already reached a point where invisible UX is becoming the norm? Or is it still more of a north star for most teams?
How to implement this! any guidance at all Felix? Thanks
You’re absolutely right. We went through the whole process of adapting our products to the limitations of technology, like mobile or just responsive design. We pushed past all the language and component styling issues, using all sorts of browser hacks to get the content and layout right. But somehow, we got stuck when it came to adapting to the human - the main, and only real, user of the product.
It’s funny when you think about it. Even though we talk about personalised experiences, they’re still limited by a fixed number of possibilities and overly complex logic. So we just rely on the user figuring it out or clicking through.
That limitation is finally being lifted with AI. We can start creating products that are more human-oriented 🙂 based on different mental models, as the cost of implementing complex logic continues to decrease.