It's time to talk about these UI trends

Ғылым және технология

Hey guys! Let's explore some of the simplest yet most popular UI trends right now, like creative buttons, loading screens, progress bars, color blending, 3D models, GSAP animations, locomotive scrolling, huge texts, and so on.
// ✨ Helpful links:
10 Simple Yet Cool Popular UI Effects: codepen.io/Juxtopposed/pen/NW...
Source Code for Page Scroll Progress Bars: codepen.io/Juxtopposed/pen/bG...
Source Code for Spline 3D Landing page with Glass effect: codepen.io/Juxtopposed/pen/Po...
Custom Catsor: codepen.io/Juxtopposed/pen/dy...
Escaping Button: codepen.io/Juxtopposed/pen/ab...
// ✨ Become a supporter:
ko-fi.com/juxtopposedme
// ✨ Let's connect:
Twitter: / juxtopposed
CodePen: codepen.io/Juxtopposed
Dribbble: dribbble.com/juxtopposed
Github: github.com/juxtopposed
Thanks for watching!
--------
// Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
00:12 Benefits
00:36 Drawbacks
00:57 Loading screens
01:55 Huge texts
02:15 Custom cursors
02:37 Bento grids
03:56 Color blending
04:48 Buttons and CTAs
05:40 Progress bars
06:00 3D models
07:24 Locomotive scrolling
08:04 Using GSAP
08:54 Outro
----------
// Websites and designs featured:
decriminalizepoverty.org/
builder.campsuha.com/
dotlinecode.com/en/
oakslane.ch/en
pasqua.it/
ubac-store.com/
virtualmuseum.fukuoka-kenbi.jp/
codepen.io/lucasdellabella/pe...
dribbble.com/shots/3505683-Si...
dribbble.com/shots/21296565-R...
bentogrids.com/
codepen.io/elkanodata/details...
codepen.io/ig_design/pen/zXVGem
codepen.io/cassie-codes/pen/L...
codepen.io/Vishal4225/pen/gOB...
m3.material.io/get-started
littlebig.band/
www.doublepoint.com/
motion.zajno.com/
redneck.media/
#uitrends #gsap #awwwards

Пікірлер: 653

  • @juxtopposed
    @juxtopposed11 ай бұрын

    What do you guys think about these trends? It's time to share some unpopular opinions. ✨

  • @Poldovico

    @Poldovico

    11 ай бұрын

    This just popped up in my recommended, this very much isn't my crowd, and since you asked I'm going to be a grognard about it. To me, these things look like ads, because in most situations I see them in, they are, and ads annoy me. In non-advertising-related contexts, these layouts and effects still invoke the intense annoyance that I feel towards advertising, and therefore on an emotional level they put me off whatever uses them long before I can be positively affected by any of their more practical merits. That said, even when I push past that annoyance, I find that in the way I use the web, such designs prove more often an obstacle than a help. The most immediate reason I can identify for why is the frequent lack of a clear index in a conventional location. My ideal interaction with a website is a lightning-fast affair: I quickly scan a complete and informative table of contents, open the one thing I came for in a new tab, and off I go on my merry way with the information I needed at my fingertips, never having to think about the rest of the website again. Anything that gets in the way of that process just accumulates as regret over choosing that particular website. Attempts by the site to "curate my experience" mainly surface the feeling of being manipulated, and that feels unpleasant and uncomfortable. In my mind, a website should be an open book, unafraid to direct the user to what they came for in the most expedient way possible. Hiding the data behind cute animations and curated layouts seems to me as absurd as a dictionary in flowery prose. That's not to say a site can't look beautiful. It can and as much as possible it should. Just please make that happen in a way that doesn't sacrifice usefulness. I'll drive an ugly car a thousand times if I have to, but I won't replace it with a beautiful statue of a car that doesn't get me to the office.

  • @Poldovico

    @Poldovico

    11 ай бұрын

    Actually, I tell an accidental lie. I just realized I am subscribed from the color picker video. That video was very good and very clever, and I am glad to be reminded of it. The topic of this video just happens to be a compilation of everything that drives me up a wall about the modern web.

  • @richardmhain

    @richardmhain

    11 ай бұрын

    Awesome! Good to see those cool ui, especially the 3d stuff. Looking forward using some of them someday :) Great job, thanks for sharing. Cheers!

  • @JerryLikeTheMouse

    @JerryLikeTheMouse

    11 ай бұрын

    Those "cool" websites are annoying to use. Even Apple's product presentations on their website are leaning too far into this kind of design.

  • @osademe

    @osademe

    11 ай бұрын

    Is there a course on this? My web pages are just bland 😞

  • @MrGrayNk
    @MrGrayNk11 ай бұрын

    As a user, I can't stress this enough: never ever ever highjack my scrollbar. I couldn't care less if it's boring or not to scroll, I just want all pages to behave the same. Don't do "smooth" scrolling, definitely don't switch from vertical to horizontal scrolling. Loading on demand / scaling during scrolling is fine, but those other effects are the worst of trendy effects IMO

  • @mandeadhungry

    @mandeadhungry

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree, as someone who can't do those effects now I have the reason not to do them. lol

  • @anushgopalakrishnan

    @anushgopalakrishnan

    11 ай бұрын

    what's wrong with horizontal scrolling? I think it's really cool

  • @wittywolk

    @wittywolk

    11 ай бұрын

    I really like smooh scrolling, but I do it without highjacking.

  • @hermannpaschulke1583

    @hermannpaschulke1583

    11 ай бұрын

    And also don't hijack the browser back button

  • @majoralter

    @majoralter

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@anushgopalakrishnanI also don't get it 😂

  • @roccociccone597
    @roccociccone59711 ай бұрын

    Thing is, instead of adding useless loading animations or even loading screens, focus on building your application with a focus on performance and you won’t need any of this. I’m a professional software engineer and I guarantee you response times and loading times contribute more to the user experience than any fancy mouse cursor or useless scrolling animation. We spend so much time making things look “good” and completely forget performance implications.

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    Totally agree with you. Still, I think such projects mainly aim to 'look good', so unfortunately, they don't seem to care about 'users'.

  • @roccociccone597

    @roccociccone597

    11 ай бұрын

    @@juxtopposed that’s because and I don’t mean to be offensive, those projects are often written mostly by people without a good knowledge of the actual technology they use, or they just get pressured into ignoring it by project management. Often I see horrendous JavaScript code that just strings together libraries, without knowing what it actually does under the hood.

  • @Stroopwafe1

    @Stroopwafe1

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree with you, but it's still better to have, say, a progress bar that only shows up for half a second, than it does displaying nothing for that half a second. Yes focus on performance and optimisations, but don't forget about informing the user what's happening

  • @roccociccone597

    @roccociccone597

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Stroopwafe1 of course just display a basic spinner and that's all you need. What I meant is theese interactive or special loading screens.

  • @jessemorningstar

    @jessemorningstar

    9 ай бұрын

    "I'm a *professional* software engineer" 👉Red flag. 🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩 Anyways, everything exists on a spectrum: you can't put a blanket statement on these techniques/trends and say they're all bad or useless. As in all things that require taste you'll find more bad examples than good, just as there is more bad music being produced than good. Saying that all these techniques are useless is just snobbism. These sites winning awards are judged by people of very high artistic taste and technical competence. And they're being pinned and bookmarked and collected by designers because they have something other sites don't. That's why people turn to them for inspiration. So within their context or genre they're pushing the boundaries in exactly the right ways. At the end of the day, differentiation is what really wins and sells. As the legendary Tyra Banks teaches in her Harvard business school course: different is better than better. Some food for thought. PS: all this fuss about load times is nice, but have you ever gone to a nightclub, or to the launch of an anticipated product, or to a concert, or to the opening weekend of a summer blockbuster? How long do you think people wait standing in lines? Go figure right?

  • @gameofpj3286
    @gameofpj328611 ай бұрын

    Actually one important thing: If you add lots of animations to your site, please make sure prefer reduced motion works. Thanks

  • @ego-lay_atman-bay

    @ego-lay_atman-bay

    11 ай бұрын

    I agree, but I also say that you should just put a toggle on your page, instead of only relying on the browser, because for some reason, I can't find that setting on mobile, and websites that have a lot of animations, just lag so much on my ipad. I'd say the nintendo websites are a good example, except for their menus, they're terrible on mobile.

  • @kijeenki

    @kijeenki

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ego-lay_atman-baysettings>accessibility>motion

  • @theseangle

    @theseangle

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@ego-lay_atman-bayyeah it's most of the times configured globally in your device, not in the browser. The browser then just picks that info up from your device settings.

  • @johnw7707
    @johnw770711 ай бұрын

    As a web developer, I find that the more javascript you have to load, the worse it gets. Not only because of the overhead, but because CSS and html standards were carefully designed for usability and accessibility, and javascript is your escape from all that. As a user, I actually don't mind the snazzy CSS effects as long as I feel like I'm navigating a website

  • @yonoseespanol

    @yonoseespanol

    9 ай бұрын

    Largely true, except some UI components require javascript for accessibility (dropdowns, for example).

  • @sorcdk2880

    @sorcdk2880

    8 ай бұрын

    I seem to recall finding (or at least looking for) some css way to make dropdowns. Possibly some magic related to hover, like having different (and interactable) styling when its parent or itself is hovered over. I may be remember wrong, because I did end up not using it though, as it turned out to not be needed for the application anyway.

  • @kevgoeswoof

    @kevgoeswoof

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@yonoseespanolthough a simple dropdown should only add a few hundred bytes of uncompressed JS, which is negligible because that load can also be deferred.

  • @yonoseespanol

    @yonoseespanol

    8 ай бұрын

    @@sorcdk2880 CSS-only dropdowns are possible, but are not accessible.

  • @MobiusCoin
    @MobiusCoin11 ай бұрын

    As a young developer, I used to cut my teeth on this kind of work. It was a showcase of my technical prowess. As a senior developer, I can't stand these sites anymore. None of them feel right. I always feel like I'm relearning how to use my computer just for this one context. Web Design tutorial content on KZread doesn't help in this regard. They keep pushing this kind of flashy design without any consideration of the user experience.

  • @owcaandroid

    @owcaandroid

    10 ай бұрын

    Great point. I think this is like all of the trends in any field. That something was a trend and one technology rules but as a time goes by the visual demand is higher and higher because people tend to be "innovative" and creative and want to be remembered so when one tech replaced another the whole loop starts over. Sooo maaaaybeee we will face another tech soon and whole UX will reset to default, truly friendly to user.

  • @bokmcdok

    @bokmcdok

    6 ай бұрын

    Makes me think of stacking shelves at a supermarket. I'd get into a flow opening boxes and quickly stocking shelves. That flow would be interrupted when I would come across a specially designed "easy-to-open" box, since I'd have to spend time figuring out how to open it. These flashy UI techniques are the "easy-to-open" boxes of websites.

  • @TheLexikitty
    @TheLexikitty11 ай бұрын

    As a legally blind person that works in IT, I’ll never understand tiny text on websites that then block test size manipulation, or apps that ignore system fonts, I’m all for the large text haha

  • @daniellewilson8527

    @daniellewilson8527

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, I’m also visually impaired and don’t know why text is small

  • @tomekk.1889

    @tomekk.1889

    10 ай бұрын

    What work in IT do you do?

  • @aftabqureshi7437

    @aftabqureshi7437

    10 ай бұрын

    +1@@tomekk.1889

  • @theseangle

    @theseangle

    9 ай бұрын

    They probably use viewport based units for font-size. That's a very bad practice unless you at least tame it with a clamp

  • @TheLexikitty

    @TheLexikitty

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tomekk.1889 Infra and network engineering

  • @ego-lay_atman-bay
    @ego-lay_atman-bay11 ай бұрын

    As a pc, android phone, and slow ipad user, all these modern effects are terrible, and give me a degrading experience on many websites. I'm not even joking, these modern websites usually lag a whole lot on my ipad, which makes me click off the website. Horizontally scrolling is also the epitome of all evil, I mean, it's just super disorienting, especially on mobile. I mean, swiping up scrolls right? What kind of black magic is that? Plus, hijaking the scrolling, like stopping the scrolling to do some stupid animation that I don't care about is awful, and should never be done, because it makes me think I've hit the bottom of the page. Custom cursors are also terrible, especially if it's just an element that follows the mouse, because when it follows the mouse, it actually lags behind the mouse. Custom cursors are fine on game sites, but not on anything else. The biggest gripe I have is, it takes away any personalization that the user might have already done to make their experience better for them, for example, I made my cursor very large and black because I found it easier to find the mouse when it's that big.

  • @kurtmueller2089
    @kurtmueller208911 ай бұрын

    Peak UI design is archived only by those old academic university websites that include a ~ (tilde) in the URL and contain no CSS or JS whatsoever. Usually they contain the information about which version of Apache webserver they are running on in the footer of the site. The best ones also contain "last updated on XX/YY/199X" Even on dial-up, those were always blazingly fast.

  • @realjame

    @realjame

    11 ай бұрын

    Well said!!

  • @Necrocidal

    @Necrocidal

    9 ай бұрын

    No need for a search backend on those pages either, the whole page is a giant listing so Ctrl+F to find anything

  • @thezipcreator

    @thezipcreator

    7 ай бұрын

    pure html (or almost pure html, maybe with like 20 lines of css to center text, change the font, or whatnot) is the best website design paradigm; it's usually always good for the user experience (unless the content is just random bullshit, ex. time cube) also imo all websites should work without javascript; disabling should just cause normally interactive elements (e.g. liking a video on youtube) to refresh the page. the small forum website Raddle is built with this mindset and it's so much better for it

  • @traveller23e

    @traveller23e

    7 ай бұрын

    @@thezipcreator This, 100%. I sometimes end up using Lynx, e.g. when I have problems with my main browser or I just happen to be in a terminal at the time, and it's really depressing how many websites fail to function without js. First they try to set about ten or fifteen cookies, then they load the page but the top half is the cookie advisory (obviously) and when you scroll down you have weirdly formatted header menus (sometimes duplicated), and then the body of the site but none of the links work.

  • @user-up1id5rv2m

    @user-up1id5rv2m

    6 ай бұрын

    How can I find such websites?

  • @neo_uwuowo
    @neo_uwuowo11 ай бұрын

    i feel like one of the worst thing a site can do is make it so if you hit the back button on the site it just sends you back to it. you have to right click the history to go back to whatever page was before it.

  • @thegardenofeatin5965

    @thegardenofeatin5965

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah where it loads a page that redirects to another page in an effort to essentially disable the back button? Yeah that can die in a pit of burning spiders.

  • @CubicApocalypse128

    @CubicApocalypse128

    11 ай бұрын

    @@thegardenofeatin5965 that's unfair to the spiders, can't we just fill the pit with corium?

  • @Tetopettenson1

    @Tetopettenson1

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@thegardenofeatin5965 what did the spiders do

  • @jmalmsten

    @jmalmsten

    10 ай бұрын

    A site that messes with the back button is an intant ban and boycott for me. I do not trust anyone that would dare touch such basic functionality. Dear dog I hate sites that use tricks like that. It really.. truly. Should be goddamned illegal to mess with the back button. Prison time equivalent to tax fraud on nation wide scale or something. F those sites...

  • @LittleGoblinBoi

    @LittleGoblinBoi

    8 ай бұрын

    Wait, it's a thing they actively do? I just thought my internet is slower than usual. Holy fuck, that's actually evil

  • @Issvor
    @Issvor11 ай бұрын

    It's pretty crazy that almost every single site on awwwards look the same, and almost all have poor UX, or at least subpar UX. I honestly thought I was going crazy because "how could it win site of the month with bad UX?" Then after a few weeks of visiting I realized it's a design award site. Awwwards doesn't care about how intuitive a site is, or if it makes any actual sense for the end user. With that being said, the designs and efforts are very cool, and actually creating most of the effects is very impressive with vanilla JS, so I like to look for inspiration and try to recreate some design and features for the challenge

  • @Linuxdirk

    @Linuxdirk

    11 ай бұрын

    It’s like “Unixporn” or absurdly complex setups in your favorite editor or IDE. It’s nice to look at, it flashy, and you can make great KZread videos with it. But in reality none of this is really usable.

  • @realopvisual

    @realopvisual

    9 ай бұрын

    Awwwards, Behance, Dribbble are like fashion shows for the creative industries, they're fun to look at sometimes and where we go to for inspirations. But honestly they're full of bad practices and things that should never be implemented in real products.

  • @trimonmusic
    @trimonmusic11 ай бұрын

    Using CSS to add "scroll-behaviour: smooth", I have no problem with - it's not generally considered scrolljacking and is actually helpful to help the user understand how far they have jumped when navigating. I don't particularly mind horizontal scroll, when used tastefully and for more visual/marketing-focused sites. But if you modify the scroll speed or change the scroll friction via JavaScript, it's a race to see whether I can complete my task before I abandon your site for poor usability. I'm a web developer, my browser is like a car, I know how I expect it to act and if you mess with the pedals and gearbox I will not be traffic on your site for long.

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    Couldn't agree more.

  • @Linuxdirk

    @Linuxdirk

    11 ай бұрын

    I consider sites forcing me to scroll how THEY want as hostile.

  • @TheBswan

    @TheBswan

    11 ай бұрын

    Horizontal scroll is often non-conforming with accessibility guidelines, specifically WCAG 2.1 SC 1.4.10 Reflow. "Content can be presented without loss of information or functionality, and without requiring scrolling in two dimensions for [vertical scrolling content at 320px width and horizontal scrolling content at 256px height". There are a few exceptions made for particular types of content like data-grids, but it's generally advisable for all content to fit in a single, vertically scrolling column.

  • @charlesm.2604

    @charlesm.2604

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@TheBswan Horizontal scrolling breaks the flow of the page, users don't appreciate when they aren't in control. I think there are use cases where you want to display content in a horizontal fashion because it fits your layout. Sections like "recent blog posts cards", or "customers reviews". For those instances it makes sense to have overflowing rows as opposed to taking additional vertical space since the user is already familiar with the message of that content and would probably want to access the next sections, continue his navigation. But is horizontal scrolling necessary ? You could use carousels or Netflix-like sliders with navigation buttons. These should be prioritized.

  • @NFSHeld
    @NFSHeld11 ай бұрын

    One of the things I think needs to be focused more on are user preferences, such as "prefers dark theme" or "prefers reduced motion". Because making your website good for your taste is easy, making your website also respect the taste of your customers is a lot harder.

  • @maggie3060

    @maggie3060

    8 ай бұрын

    Its not just about the taste of the customer, its about accessibility. Moving images can make people nauseous and flashing images can give people seizures. Having a reduced motion mode where the motion is fully controlled by the end user (eg scrolling) benefits them and others.

  • @traveller23e

    @traveller23e

    7 ай бұрын

    Absolutely. And if your users have to scroll a meter to get to the end of the first sentence, this particular user will mutter "fuck this" under his breath and go to find a decent site with the same information. This is not unrelated to the tabs vs spaces argument. I say tabs on documents to be edited by multiple people, because people like them to be different sizes.

  • @tr7zw
    @tr7zw11 ай бұрын

    The best are websites that just display NOTHING unless you start allowing stuff in NoScript. Bonus points when apparently the entire CSS is done via js, so it's just an unformatted mess without allowing the js to run.

  • @rollinontheboard

    @rollinontheboard

    11 ай бұрын

    is this bait

  • @colly6022

    @colly6022

    11 ай бұрын

    @@rollinontheboard no, its called a joke :)

  • @rollinontheboard

    @rollinontheboard

    11 ай бұрын

    @@colly6022 i was just making sure because you should never feed the trolls

  • @louispluspizza

    @louispluspizza

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@rollinontheboardYou sir are one clever and careful guy!

  • @Jono997

    @Jono997

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@rollinontheboardI feel like asking if it's bait is in and of itself feeding the troll if it is bait, but that's just me.

  • @dhillaz
    @dhillaz11 ай бұрын

    I think of these designs as 'spices' to be sprinkled in moderation on top of a content-focused design. Imagine going to a restaurant and being served a chicken wing buried under 2 ounces of paprika powder. Some users will refuse to eat it, some users will patiently brush the powder off, but all users will feel discouraged from visiting your restaurant again.

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    So true haha

  • @technoboop1890

    @technoboop1890

    11 ай бұрын

    thats a strangely fitting analogy

  • @aldrichallenbarcenas6740

    @aldrichallenbarcenas6740

    9 ай бұрын

    Well there's is a Chinese dish where cooked chicken is burried in chili pepers and you dig through those to find the Chicken. It's a good dish served with beer. 😅

  • @xDLiLi1337

    @xDLiLi1337

    9 ай бұрын

    just eat the chili@@aldrichallenbarcenas6740

  • @xelith6157

    @xelith6157

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@aldrichallenbarcenas6740 Good counterpoint lol

  • @LifeAquaticSteveZissou
    @LifeAquaticSteveZissou11 ай бұрын

    There's a lot of what I like to call Hipster UX Bullsh*t in these designs. I'd have a serious conversation if anyone on my team came to me with trying to pass off a lot of this as usable.

  • @hypelucas

    @hypelucas

    11 ай бұрын

    you gotta stop using the term hipster bro, it really dates you

  • @LifeAquaticSteveZissou

    @LifeAquaticSteveZissou

    11 ай бұрын

    @@hypelucas Agreed, that was the point. These design paradigms are dated.

  • @ElvenSpellmaker
    @ElvenSpellmaker11 ай бұрын

    Bento boxes that load as you scroll are a right pain. They never load in time (even on decent Internet) before you've scrolled past them and then realise you've missed a chunk of content.

  • @Powertampa
    @Powertampa10 ай бұрын

    Loading screens on websites should never ever be a thing. If it needs that much data to require one you are doing something wrong.

  • @Aiden-ham
    @Aiden-ham11 ай бұрын

    I don't think I've ever seen one of those pages where the animation progresses as you scroll that actually looks good

  • @Aiden-ham

    @Aiden-ham

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gregoryford2532 Yeah Apple’s the only one who does this semi-decently since it’s not tied to the scrolling, but even then it can still look messy if you scroll too fast

  • @anny8720

    @anny8720

    5 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@Aiden-ham on the mobile apple page the animations are tied to scrolling, I wish the non interactive portions became static after scrolling through the first time, it's really annoying to have that 'explore more' button and every horizontal scroller disappear and reappear with a whole animation when scrolling back and forth. Minus the animations the UI of the website is actually pretty good and very easy to read

  • @TotallyNotK0
    @TotallyNotK011 ай бұрын

    Most of those modern day website designs hurt my eyes. I don't know if it's just me, but I feel like simpler designs (with some occasional smooth animation or maybe a few effects) is better than a website with a ton of stuff going on

  • @boiimcfacto2364
    @boiimcfacto236411 ай бұрын

    God bless this new trend of entertaining, funny and informative web dev KZreadrs. Hyperplexed and Fireship (and now you) are my go-to channels for dev-related content and I love your style of humour so please keep making more of these!

  • @aryansoni57

    @aryansoni57

    11 ай бұрын

    finally hyperplex getting recognition he deserves

  • @trimonmusic

    @trimonmusic

    11 ай бұрын

    @@aryansoni57 hyperplexed has almost half a million subs, he's getting it! 😁

  • @iambluexd

    @iambluexd

    11 ай бұрын

    Dont worry, theyre gonna fuck themselves up like every fucking new trend

  • @aliengeo
    @aliengeo10 ай бұрын

    My hot take is that it doesn't matter how pretty your site is on the optimal viewing device if on Joe Schmoe's low-end laptop running your non-preferred browser (I've heard professional designers act as if Chrome is the only thing that exists) it looks and runs like a potato. I see so many design trends that people talk about as being great and I can't relate because my experience of them is how they lag, how they break other things, etc. My hobbyist web design work involved trying to optimize from the very beginning because of limited storage and I think it's a good habit to have gotten into.

  • @du42bz
    @du42bz10 ай бұрын

    I'm still all for bringing back pure html and minimal css websites

  • @TokyoXtreme

    @TokyoXtreme

    8 ай бұрын

    Probably explains why Markdown is so popular. Nothing like an instantly appearing hierarchical document that gets right to the point.

  • @Cathowl

    @Cathowl

    5 ай бұрын

    When I actually start putting content on my site it's going to be so simple. Near naked HTML with some limited CSS primarily for making sure images are in the right place on the screen without abusing tables.

  • @ddnava96
    @ddnava967 ай бұрын

    Something that web designers SHOULD keep in mind is that laptops and touchscreens exist. Macbooks, Windows laptops with precision trackpads and touch screens can actually input HORIZONTAL scrolling, but several websites have horizontal elements that can ONLY be scrolled by clicking annoying buttons on each side of those elements, like the thumbnail rows in Netflix. The main page shows you several rows of thumbnails, one for each section, but scrolling those rows horizontally can only be achieved by clicking buttons in the far ends of each row even when I have an inout device that's perfectly capable of doing horizontal scrolling

  • @patricknelson
    @patricknelson11 ай бұрын

    Snazzy effects _definitely_ have their place. That said, for _most_ sites... less is most definitely more. Speed and efficiency is key, especially for ecommerce or any very content heavy websites.

  • @schockocraft4897
    @schockocraft489711 ай бұрын

    The worst thing ever is that smooth scroll still happens when i am clicking a section link, or even worse when i jump between text search results (ctrl+f). Nothing worse then, when looking for the right search result and therefore stepping through a dozen of them, spending half the time looking at this godawful scroll animation

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    That's a great point you mentioned

  • @valrossenOliver
    @valrossenOliver10 ай бұрын

    Finally someone else who mentions this. Tried to look for a new library for some thing at work and the scrolling made the entire screen jump around like an action sequence. Imagine me and the other two software engineers just looking confused while thinking "so, what're the specs?", "did they show information during this slideshow that we missed?", "what just happened?". Plain, easy to read, and A SINGLE DIRECTION TO READ IN please.

  • @Blio_
    @Blio_10 ай бұрын

    So many sites have literally no idea what subtlety means like IM NOT HERE FOR A LIGHTSHOW IM HERE TO HAVE YOUR SITE ACTUALITY *LOAD* WITHOUT SAFARI AUTO-RELOADING YOUR PAGE

  • @GoldenBeholden
    @GoldenBeholden11 ай бұрын

    Websites that take over my scroll bar bother me irrationally.

  • @Zooiest
    @Zooiest11 ай бұрын

    Discord's desktop client loads 26 megabytes of JS when it starts, which is 80% of all resources. On my current laptop, the TTI can reach several minutes. I both love and hate JS, and I wish people would start using simpler and smaller libraries and style sheets Also, there's a ton of hidden potential in hand-written SVGs: I made infinitely scalable icons for a dashboard UI and pride flags with SVG, and all of them combined took up only a few kilobytes

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    You're right, and still JS itself might not be the problem in many cases. We can use lighthouse and optimize the page speed, and many sites with heavy scripts don't really do that. I think that's the main issue.

  • @gagaoolala9167
    @gagaoolala91679 ай бұрын

    Since I have a pretty puny laptop, every time I use an overdone site like this, my browser slows to a crawl and completely ruins the UX. I want nothing more than to close the site immediately. I really appreciate a well-crafted site that doesn't slurp up my CPU time.

  • @stickibug
    @stickibug10 ай бұрын

    I am absolutely sick of "dark mode" on websites and apps with no option for a "light mode." It's an accessibility issue for me. I have astigmatism, and it's nearly impossible for me to read white text on black backgrounds. For an example of what it looks like for me, check out simulations of driving with astigmatism at night. White text on a black background produces the same exact effect for me. I can strain real hard and make out what things say, but I always end up with eye pain and a headache even after a short time. My eye doctor told me a lot of this kind of straining over time could potentially make my astigmatism worse, so I have given up on most apps and websites that use *only* dark mode. I do have filter apps on my phone and desktop to help with this, but they can only do so much. I always send in feedback to the company / web dev asking for them to include a light mode for people with vision like mine, and I've had several folks respond and actually implement a light mode option :)

  • @chemreal

    @chemreal

    5 ай бұрын

    you do realise you can use extensions to turn on light mode? sure it wont look as good but atleast it wont limit you

  • @chesspiece4257

    @chesspiece4257

    5 ай бұрын

    i wish all websites had a sepia option because i have the same problem with white text but white backgrounds hurt my eyes Xᗡ

  • @CentreMetre
    @CentreMetre7 ай бұрын

    Another thing about custom cursors is them not being done correctly. One that springs to mind is one of the minecraft wikis where the cursor is a sword, but instead of the tip of the cursor (the pixel that clicks on stuff) it was somwhere in the middle of the sword. (This is from memory it couldve been a different wiki or site but has definitly happened to me)

  • @amir-ziaei
    @amir-ziaei11 ай бұрын

    I just discovered this channel and I am surprised by the quality of the content. It deserves a lot more recognition. Well done!

  • @fdwr
    @fdwr8 ай бұрын

    Faux pas for me: - smooth scrolling (I explicitly turned that off, and so do not override it) - large gaps of wasted space - zooming things in and out as you scroll - middle click not working to open new tab - preventing text selection

  • @ghaith2580
    @ghaith25802 ай бұрын

    This channel is insane , I am binge watching your stuff, interesting , educational , fun , useful and you ALSO include all the sources in the description , and on top of all of that you have a soothing voice?

  • @j.9481
    @j.948111 ай бұрын

    personally I really hate it when websites make fonts too big. I want to see more than a sentence at a time!!! do you think I have the ram to remember information that gets catapulted off the screen immediately when I continue reading >:-/

  • @chaosmagican

    @chaosmagican

    11 ай бұрын

    The worst part is that they often somehow manage to destroy zooming, I zoom out, text stays the same

  • @ultrahalf
    @ultrahalf11 ай бұрын

    scroll hijack should be a crime

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    100%

  • @sssamalander
    @sssamalander11 ай бұрын

    Grid implementation could be much improved at 3:22 - First of all, I’d make the entire thing a grid, then control how big each box is with grid-column/row (e.g if it should go across to columns it should be grid-column: span 2;) Also, you should use fr instead of auto, and you can do repeat(5, 1fr) instead of 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr

  • @oluwatayo.x

    @oluwatayo.x

    11 ай бұрын

    yeah that’s what i was thinking as well. you don’t have to use flexbox cause the entire layout can be made with grid.

  • @jacoblockwood4034

    @jacoblockwood4034

    11 ай бұрын

    Was looking for this comment, thanks

  • @YuriG03042

    @YuriG03042

    11 ай бұрын

    it was just a simple example, it's not that deep

  • @jacoblockwood4034

    @jacoblockwood4034

    11 ай бұрын

    @@YuriG03042 I disagree, the creator is showing this as the best way to make layouts like this, especially since these videos seem to be somewhat aimed at beginners (given all the tutorials)

  • @NutchapolSal

    @NutchapolSal

    11 ай бұрын

    for real

  • @cristiancazares
    @cristiancazares11 ай бұрын

    I've been struggled for weeks building a website for my porfolio as software engineer... AND ALL THIS TIME I WAS DONIG A BENTO GRID WITHOUT KNOWING. Thank you sooo much! Now I know how to look for more inspiration and whatnot!

  • @Jonas-Seiler
    @Jonas-Seiler11 ай бұрын

    Personally, I like to make a distinction between ordinary websites and interactive web apps.

  • @karanea
    @karanea11 ай бұрын

    As a user, I just want to see the things that I visited the site for. Just give me the information in a way that is easy to read and doesn't require me to scroll if avoidable. When I am looking for a cooking recipe I just want to see the recipe and not 33 pictures, 17 titles and a story about the author. The less time the page needs to load, the better. EDIT: 90% of the time JS makes websites worse for the user imo

  • @Jet-Pack
    @Jet-Pack10 ай бұрын

    As a user I have javascript disabled by default. Loading screens make me leave the page, custom cursor is a no go, overriding scroll is also a no go. Sure its fun the first time hut i immediately get distracted and look what happens if i unlock my scroll wheel and spin it at 1000 revolutions per second. I also click any link with middle mouse button and never use the back navigation. If your page can handle all that then great

  • @1e1001
    @1e100110 ай бұрын

    my method for loading bars, buttons, and other fancy effects is to make sure there's a no-javascript fallback and add a transition off the fallback if javascript manages to load (not everyone has it enabled!), for example replacing a static css animation with one that reacts to your mouse cursor

  • @DVSS77
    @DVSS776 ай бұрын

    I am binging all of your videos right now. The editing, storytelling and simplicity in the explanations is just amazing. easily the best channel I have found that's related to frontend design , UI/UX

  • @Roxor128
    @Roxor1289 ай бұрын

    A tip regarding buttons you left out: SHADE THEM! Make them look like a 3D object, not a flat-coloured rectangle. If there's one thing Microsoft got right in 1990s versions of Windows, it was making it clear what's clickable. Pity they forgot it when they made Windows 8 and brought back the flat UI from the 1980s.

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    8 ай бұрын

    Yeah. Microsoft and Apple have both fallen down the flat UI rabbit hole, and IMHO the usability of all their products has suffered as a consequence. :(

  • @Roxor128

    @Roxor128

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tookitogo And every clueless dolt playing follow-the-leader, which is by far the worst thing about it. About the only kind of program that bucks the trend is games.

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Roxor128 Yup, totally agree.

  • @misho_dev
    @misho_dev11 ай бұрын

    Impressed by how many quality vids you're releasing! Great point about those 'award winning' sites usually being product or portfolio sites too

  • @snz_iisera
    @snz_iisera11 ай бұрын

    As an average user, any time scrolling isn't moving the page up, like it suppose to, i instaclose the tab. Im not letting designers take away control from me. 😈

  • @Albert-lp8ql
    @Albert-lp8ql11 ай бұрын

    I just started to learn UI/UX design and found this video and your channel. I really like your Fireship-style video with great content and practical instructions! Subscribed!

  • @Oneiroi0
    @Oneiroi011 ай бұрын

    Ngl, The amount of high quality production in this video is amazing.

  • @aimhigh3701
    @aimhigh370111 ай бұрын

    Great video. Way to many designers are prioritising their own ideas over the experience of the user. Sometimes I scroll through a beautiful site but find it hard to read and make sense of things. It’s ironically bad design.

  • @Sammysapphira
    @Sammysapphira11 ай бұрын

    I can't stand this meta of everything being HUGE... it's so obnoxious. Screens are so big these days, why only show 1 thing at a time? Why do I have to scroll..scroll..scroll..scroll..scroll..scroll.. until I find the info I want.

  • @zoomxrist
    @zoomxrist11 ай бұрын

    The content quality is amazing! First I thought it's a channel with the millions of followers. Thanks for the video))

  • @yahx1
    @yahx14 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite channel on youtube. Please continue posting your stellar content.

  • @CoolJRT2009
    @CoolJRT200911 ай бұрын

    The loading screen I use is the browser loading images into the spaces already set out by CSS, just like the old days because that actually works from a UX standpoint

  • @MarvinJWendt
    @MarvinJWendt11 ай бұрын

    Your videos are so well-made and informational. Keep going like that, and you'll be in the top designer channels, for sure!

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you! ✨️

  • @amixam
    @amixam11 ай бұрын

    this video is filled with alotta inspiration! thank you !!

  • @Magnogen
    @Magnogen11 ай бұрын

    Love this. Definitely some good inspiration!

  • @joseqhh
    @joseqhh11 ай бұрын

    watched your video for colour design, and now this one popped up too. amazing content you got:)

  • @joshuayang2369
    @joshuayang236911 ай бұрын

    Wow, I'm just a beginner to web design and this was such a comprehensive video!

  • @hlavco
    @hlavco11 ай бұрын

    I still hate infinite scroll websites. Sometimes I want to be able to navigate by dragging my scroll bar, and these sites keep changing its range.

  • @linusziegler7086
    @linusziegler708611 ай бұрын

    this is incredibly valuable and underrated! looking forward to more :)

  • @eduard_soul
    @eduard_soul11 ай бұрын

    Really happy to have discovered your channel it is amazing, thank you for your work

  • @juxtopposed

    @juxtopposed

    11 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoy it! ✨️

  • @Spikehead777
    @Spikehead77711 ай бұрын

    This is another reason I use things like NoScript.

  • @be12
    @be1211 ай бұрын

    Very informative! I'd noticed this tendency now toward extra large font, but not so much the fancy scrolling (thankfully).

  • @ghazawe1
    @ghazawe16 ай бұрын

    I just discovered your channel.. The quality is superb 👌 Great job!

  • @Stdvwr
    @Stdvwr11 ай бұрын

    I'm so thankful that none of the websites that I use have any of the elements depicted in this video

  • @onem0repixel
    @onem0repixel10 ай бұрын

    Just thanks. I honestly was wondering if I'm gonna agree with you, and you literally show some examples I always criticize XD. Telling the bad ux is good, but you always take the time to explain the problems and gives come suggestion to how to do better. And this is peak content

  • @galvinvoltag
    @galvinvoltag6 ай бұрын

    I love that running button and will definitely use it.

  • @LucasRizzotto
    @LucasRizzotto11 ай бұрын

    Love the channel, congrats on the video!

  • @Omniwoof
    @Omniwoof11 ай бұрын

    This is a fantastic ad! Well done Spline3d!

  • @DjokovicIsOurLordAndSaviour
    @DjokovicIsOurLordAndSaviour8 ай бұрын

    This channel is gorgeous! Thank yooou!

  • @henrynguyen-ep8mz
    @henrynguyen-ep8mz11 ай бұрын

    Wow super insightful! Keep these videos coming!

  • @voidmind
    @voidmind11 ай бұрын

    Your KZread channel is a great argument for quality over quantity (speaking about the low number of video). 21.6k subs after just 5 videos is pretty good growth

  • @toperr
    @toperr11 ай бұрын

    Dude I love this one! Nice video. Subscriber earned

  • @GermanFernandoCentenoGuttmann
    @GermanFernandoCentenoGuttmann11 ай бұрын

    My god, this videos are AMAZING. Good info, learned a few things, thanks :D

  • @WarLord18
    @WarLord1811 ай бұрын

    Love your content, keep up the great work :D

  • @matiassalgado4776
    @matiassalgado477611 ай бұрын

    loved your video!! keep up with this fabulous channel

  • @dukkcc2
    @dukkcc211 ай бұрын

    these are some cool tips, might use some when i code my website

  • @Malweis
    @Malweis11 ай бұрын

    Just to comment out there are pretty easy to make Onscroll effects with framer motion. You basically just set what animation should trigger when the element passes the viewport

  • @theoutsiderprod
    @theoutsiderprod10 ай бұрын

    Very nice video. I think a greatly under discussed part of these modern ui is the accessibility. Everybodys vision degrades, so taking into consideration readability, and making sure your website doesn't break when zooming in not only helps visually impaired people like myself, but it futureproofs for everybody. Accessibilty really needs to be improved, far more than trendy animations.

  • @dzbanek4971
    @dzbanek49716 ай бұрын

    That's a great video. Very interesting to watch.

  • @cphotos153
    @cphotos15311 ай бұрын

    Wow the Quality of this video is incredible

  • @darshandev1754
    @darshandev175411 ай бұрын

    This video was amazing, love it

  • @designgraphique
    @designgraphique3 ай бұрын

    Excellent, I learned a lot.

  • @davidscancelled9494
    @davidscancelled949411 ай бұрын

    Really entertaining informational video, thanks! Subbed.

  • @velkb228
    @velkb22811 ай бұрын

    Once again I feel the urge to express how FREAKING GADAMN AWESOME this channel is

  • @fixeuwest
    @fixeuwest11 ай бұрын

    Very nice video! Thanks

  • @SandhraKP
    @SandhraKP9 ай бұрын

    Damn cool video! It’s so well made and explained!

  • @Knopex
    @Knopex11 ай бұрын

    1:10 javascript is not compiled, it's interpreted by the browser engine

  • @lance740
    @lance7406 ай бұрын

    I absolutely love the loading screen idea. It will most likely never appear because technology is just good but I still think it adds an immersive layer to the site.

  • @ManderO9
    @ManderO911 ай бұрын

    bro managed to put two sponsors in one video

  • @codingmickey
    @codingmickey11 ай бұрын

    loved the video thanks!

  • @CobaltTS
    @CobaltTS11 ай бұрын

    Great video, instant sub

  • @lazarskiy
    @lazarskiy11 ай бұрын

    I'm pretty sure that I haven't seen this cat meme in such high quality before. Thanks!

  • @2dgirl
    @2dgirl5 ай бұрын

    u are so cool for showing ac iv bf loading screen :D

  • @kiricappuchin
    @kiricappuchin8 ай бұрын

    JS is good in moderation for a cool effect or two. When the whole site becomes dependent on it, I’m really not a fan… Great vid! I really like your style 👍

  • @lucadipaoloformiconi681
    @lucadipaoloformiconi6817 ай бұрын

    i love the content of this channel

  • @namankeshari7332
    @namankeshari73329 ай бұрын

    This was amazing!!!

  • @RedmarKerkhof
    @RedmarKerkhof11 ай бұрын

    I'm go glad I left this field years ago.

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