p/croct
by
Juliana Amorim
Hey folks!
We re gearing up for our next launch and would love your input.
19
42
p/general
Sergey Kargopolov
I continue building UI pages for my email marketing platform using AI, and I wondered if AI generated UI designs are good enough for production apps?
They seem to work great on mobile devices and desktop screens. They load fast. They behave normally. I m personally perfectly fine and happy to use them in production, but what is your opinion? Am I missing something? Should I be worried about using them in production?To build UI I use Lovable and Google Stitch. I go feature by feature, and for each feature I create a separate Git branch. This way I m more careful that one update does not break my entire website. P.S. The attached screenshot is a work in progress design that I created using Google Stitch for the Email Automation and Sequencing feature.
8
9
fmerian
6
5
Yashaswini Ippili
11
p/producthunt
In a recent issue of The Breakpoint, we talked quality software.
Does design matter to developers? In my opinion, yes. Take Stripe, Linear, and Resend for example. Both dev-first products made craftsmanship a first principle.
14
32
Tanya Jeon
25
18
Happy Tuesday! I stumbled upon this AMA session with @syswarren and enjoyed learning how the design team works at Product Hunt:> "We have a shared UI library where you can find our most common components, as well as the pieces that make the components"How about you? do you use a design system?Edit: According to Nielsen Norman Group, a design system is:> A set of standards to manage design at scale by reducing redundancy while creating a shared language and visual consistency across different pages and channels. Basically, it s a set of design tokens and UI components used by product design teams to work with consistency at scale.I'm eager to read your comments on this!
12
7
Thomas Schranz ⛄️
16
13
p/fine
Dan Leshem
Recently I've worked with a group of non-corders trying to "vibe code" their apps with AI. While knowing code is clearly not a must these days, it helps to get technical.People who were familiar with basic software engineering concepts were 10x more likely to success and get better results.So, with the hope of providing value to the non-coders people, I've created a quick roadmap for the basic terms and concepts you should be familiar with.
Requirements: Building apps with AI is all about being able to clearly guide AI and express your app features and requirements. You need to be able to express those ideas and explain them as you d explain to a human developer. Think like a Technical Product Manager.
Frontend: The face of your app. It's what your users see and interact with. It could be a website, a mobile app, or a desktop app. Most popular frontend libraries and frameworks are React, Next.js.
UIs: They are the buttons, the forms, the modals, the tooltips, etc. In React, the UI is built with components. For design & styling, Tailwind CSS is the most popular library. For animations, Framer Motion is the most popular library.
Packages & npm: Apps are not built from scratch.They are built on top of existing libraries and frameworks, like lego blocks.
The most popular package manager is npm. For example, "react-hook-form" is a famous package that helps you build forms.
Backend: The backend is the part of your app that runs on the server.
It's where you store your data, your business logic.
e.g: If you want to send an email, or process payments - this is where you'll do it.
Vibe tip: Use minimal backends with serverless functions.
Database: The database is where you store your data.
It's where you store your users, your projects, your tasks, etc. Think of it as a big spreadsheet.
I recommend using a database that is integrated with your frontend.
For example: Fine, or Supabase.
API: Real-life apps almost always need to integrate with other apps.
For example: if you want to send email, or get weather data, or integrate with AI - it's all done through APIs.
Hosting & Deployment: For your app to be accessible to the public, you need to host it.
The code is usually hosted on GitHub, and deployed to platforms like Fine, Vercel, Netlify.
Finally, being comfortable with code is helpful - even if not a must.
AI often makes minor mistakes (like importing a wrong package), and if you re not afraid of reviewing code - you will get better results faster.
52
Dhruv Bhatia
50
70
Jason Lee
89
82
Ilia Pluzhnikov
I m building landing pages for my next product and exploring AI UI tools that actually help ship faster.
Curious to hear what s working for you from the apps like Lobable or v0
I've tested both and cannot choose what tool is better to buy. Maybe there are better tools?
23
Sepideh Yazdi
Nika
p/introduce-yourself
dulaj dilshan
I'm Dulaj , a UI/UX designer and Framer developer with over 6 years of experience crafting clean, user-focused digital experiences. I recently founded encolab.agency to help startups and solo founders turn early ideas into powerful, production-ready websites using design and no-code.
I focus on:
Modern, user-first interface design
Seamless, responsive Framer development
Tom F 🚀
Veeresh Devireddy
Eric Amorin
2