Government websites might go that way (or booking sites) but if you are choosing between one brand and another, you’ll still need good design that makes your brand stand out. An operator might get you to the site faster, but the branding still needs to do the heavy lifting and make you splash that cash.
Just like everything eventually evolves into crab, maybe every website will eventually evolve into tables. I just hope we can get back so that we don't have to deal with the sorry excuse css solutions that sometimes work.
This assessment is more of a hypothesis than an assertion. One that I think many designers questioned with the release of the Operator. At the moment, only $200/mo users have access to this feature, so with time, we’ll see the criteria AI companies require for websites to adopt.
Too many animations ruin a website’s professionalism. Users always want a clean, static, and efficient UI for example like RUclips, not distracting fresh clean UI, We need to focus on more fresh clean UI over-designed experience.
Potentially back to a brutalist HTML4 like paradigm with simple submittable forms. You don't need ANY design, JS or CSS anymore, at all. A lot of websites might look more like YML or markdown files than HTML, with sections which contain prompts to influence the agent into taking certain actions (helpfully, or maybe even maliciously). It doesn't need to look good, content just needs to be highly structured. I think most websites will keep things backwards compatible -- usable by humans, but not as a main consideration.
You're paying per millisecond of operator attention as a bot manager so sites that allow for streamlined UI options will be seen as the cheaper option. Especially in the world of travel booking sites, and other bloated, ad-infested experiences on the web. The bot is never on a mobile device, or a mobile network, it doesn't need partial reloads, or real time interactions with remote state. It's trying to spend no more than 2000ms on any given page. Many sites fail to paint in those time frames!
I hate flat and overall uniform boring design so much, I like colorful and interesting, thats why I made my website lean a lot into the neubrutalism aesthetic
databases ahh websites
Government websites might go that way (or booking sites) but if you are choosing between one brand and another, you’ll still need good design that makes your brand stand out. An operator might get you to the site faster, but the branding still needs to do the heavy lifting and make you splash that cash.
What about the advertisement? If robots are the ones browsing the site the websites will loose ad revenue right?
Just like everything eventually evolves into crab, maybe every website will eventually evolve into tables. I just hope we can get back so that we don't have to deal with the sorry excuse css solutions that sometimes work.
This assessment is more of a hypothesis than an assertion. One that I think many designers questioned with the release of the Operator. At the moment, only $200/mo users have access to this feature, so with time, we’ll see the criteria AI companies require for websites to adopt.
I know that things change but it’s so scary how quickly it happens ☠️☠️☠️
No the UI will be the same, but there will be more API"s
Too many animations ruin a website’s professionalism. Users always want a clean, static, and efficient UI for example like RUclips, not distracting fresh clean UI, We need to focus on more fresh clean UI over-designed experience.
Potentially back to a brutalist HTML4 like paradigm with simple submittable forms.
You don't need ANY design, JS or CSS anymore, at all. A lot of websites might look more like YML or markdown files than HTML, with sections which contain prompts to influence the agent into taking certain actions (helpfully, or maybe even maliciously). It doesn't need to look good, content just needs to be highly structured.
I think most websites will keep things backwards compatible -- usable by humans, but not as a main consideration.
You're paying per millisecond of operator attention as a bot manager so sites that allow for streamlined UI options will be seen as the cheaper option. Especially in the world of travel booking sites, and other bloated, ad-infested experiences on the web. The bot is never on a mobile device, or a mobile network, it doesn't need partial reloads, or real time interactions with remote state. It's trying to spend no more than 2000ms on any given page. Many sites fail to paint in those time frames!
I mean, take it one step further: Why have a UI at all, why not just an API?
I hate flat and overall uniform boring design so much, I like colorful and interesting, thats why I made my website lean a lot into the neubrutalism aesthetic
yeah no
also radix ui
BS