From pixels to personalization: The future of design
When it comes to technological shifts, we often overestimate their short-term impact while underestimating their long-term transformative power.
When it comes to technological shifts, we often overestimate their short-term impact while underestimating their long-term transformative power.
Our Community Products teams continue to be focused on the pain points and tasks developers want to accomplish every day when they visit Stack Overflow. We are passionate about helping developers learn, share, and grow in their careers, and it has been exciting to watch some experimentation and discovery efforts come to life over the last quarter. Highlights from this last quarter include:
The most exciting thing about container queries, in my opinion, is that they expand what’s possible in terms of user interface design. They give us new options when it comes to responsive design, creating UIs that would be impractical or impossible using traditional media queries.
There’s a list of content. You can edit individual items by tapping or clicking their row, or you can select adjacent checkboxes to perform bulk actions.
Talking to designers and observing discussions on social media, I’ve been noticing more and more conversations about burnout—its causes, ways to cope with it, and the symptoms, which often take a long and challenging process to overcome.
Baby showers will be out. Nesting parties will be in. Pickle fixes, cherry reds and chaotic cakes will be all the rage.
Understand the role of the critical rendering path in user experience, and how you can shorten this path to display the most important content early.
Cybersecurity platforms are growing daily, addressing various threats and risks for individuals and also companies.
Lunar New Year is a time for celebration, renewal, and reflection. In 2025, we welcome the Year of the Snake, a symbol of transformation, intuition, and wisdom. We’ve curated a moodboard filled with serpentine-inspired designs.
Job titles aren’t always accurate. They don’t tell you the little details of what goes into a day’s work. And they can’t predict the odd situations you’ll get pulled into. Web design is a great example.