Web Design & Development
How To Defend Your Design Process — Smashing Magazine
Ever felt pressure to speed up your design process? Here’s how to address unrealistic expectations and foster a shared understanding with stakeholders, ensuring everyone is
Thoughts After 15 Years Spent In UX Design (Part 2) — Smashing Magazine
In this two-part series, Andrii Zhdan outlines common challenges faced at the start of a design career and offers advice to smooth your journey based
The Best Of Pro Scheduler Libraries — Smashing Magazine
For teams working remotely across the globe or together in an office, as well as for any group of collaborating users, a scheduler can be
It’s Time To Talk About “CSS5” — Smashing Magazine
Have you ever wondered what happened after CSS3? It’s common knowledge that we never saw CSS4 come after it, yet we have a plethora of
Thoughts After 15 Years Spent In UX Design (Part 1) — Smashing Magazine
In this two-part series, Andrii Zhdan outlines common challenges faced at the start of a design career and offers advice to smooth your journey based
How To Build A Multilingual Website With Nuxt.js — Smashing Magazine
Handling translations for multilingual websites is famously difficult and, yet, crucial for many companies and organizations that serve a global audience. Thankfully, modern tooling abstracts
Sweet Nostalgia In August (2024 Wallpapers Edition) — Smashing Magazine
Do you need a little inspiration boost? Well, then our new batch of desktop wallpapers might be for you. Designed by the community for the
Rethinking The Role Of Your UX Teams And Move Beyond Firefighting — Smashing Magazine
Many UX professionals often find themselves working alone, and usually face more projects impacting user experience than they can handle. In this article, Paul Boag
Integrating Image-To-Text And Text-To-Speech Models (Part 1) — Smashing Magazine
Joas Pambou built an app that integrates vision language models (VLMs) and text-to-speech (TTS) AI technologies to describe images audibly with speech. This audio description
Getting To The Bottom Of Minimum WCAG-Conformant Interactive Element Size — Smashing Magazine
WCAG provides guidance for making interactive elements more accessible by specifying minimum size requirements. In fact, the requirements are documented in two Success Criteria: 2.5.5