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Most of the laid-off designers were either senior or lead designers, had been with the company for 2 years or more, and were high performers. One-fifth of them think that getting laid off was retaliation against them and 72% don’t believe that “overhiring” was the real reason for the layoffs.


More than 200 designers voted in a blind test — the result is not what you’d expect.


It's time to make typography on the web more exciting. Huge type is a way to do that, but when and how can it be used?


Why did you quit your last job? This was the main question in my recent study I did with designers. I received 156 responses to my survey, most of them were from Product/UX designers, second and third in number of responses were graphic designers, and web designers.


I'm so excited, the book is finally all I wanted it to be from the start. I also launched an updated website with it, so I'd love to hear your thoughts about it and about the book if you decide to buy it. Cheers!


Thanks for sharing this, will make sure to use PNG8 in the future!


That's so cool, I didn't know that. Thanks for sharing!


Thanks, a lot of effort is needed to get things to look nice on different devices these days. It's a challenge.


That's ok, it's a matter of preference and how emphasized the bullet lists need to be. I even mention this somewhere in the article.


It seems like an odd preference in the first place, though. You write "...the bullets should be hanging so they don’t disrupt the flow of the text," but isn't the point of a bullet list to disrupt the flow of text in order to focus on the individual items? Most hanging bullets I've seen have been a distraction because the content of the list is lost in the body of the text plus there's this heavy element (the bullets themselves) sticking out in the margin.


> how emphasized the bullet lists need to be

Exactly. For me, the indented list emphasizes the distinct structural entity, contrasting it against the bulk of the text. This makes lists easier to recognize (especially the short ones in narrow columns, like in your example) while previewing and skimming the reading material. You mention pattern recognition at the start of the article, and this is exactly the thing that makes pattern recognition easier, for me at least. And I would prefer “practically useful” over “typographically correct” every time :-).


>And I would prefer “practically useful” over “typographically correct” every time :-).

That is a good guideline.


Spaced paragraphs are another good example of this. Apparently they "make skilled typographers cringe" but break the text up arguably more clearly, and look fine, at least to an unsophisticated rube like me.


I use bullets intentionally to break the flow. Nowadays many readers are getting tired of too long passages, and bullet points are one way to give the text visually more structure.


Yup, that's a great point. This article is based on a chapter from my book but this is chapter 6 out of 13 already. In earlier chapters, I discuss how we need to know the content, the goals of the text and what are the user's goals (read, skim, search etc.). Of course, we can't be 100% sure on their goals but we can take an educated guess based on the content we're designing with. Decisions like these should be based on that (+ personal preference of course).


This sounds like a comment based on your personal opinion. That's ok, we all have our preferences when it comes to fonts.


A bigger issue is probably the headings not fitting in the page column.

https://screenshots.firefox.com/fsetQcI74tLZbwkd/betterwebty...

[Edit: I probably should switch off webfont blocking when checking an article on fonts]


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