What are the modern design trends you hate most? Feel free to rant! Mine are:

  • Physical buttons are out of fashion, now EVERYTHING must have a touch screen instead! Especially if it makes the appliance more inconvenient to use. Like having to press a flimsy touch screen ten times to scroll through a washing machine’s programs instead of just turning a physical knob and pressing a physical start button.
  • Every website looks like it’s made for a phone and was vomited by the same app in slightly different flavors of vomit. And then having the nerve to tell you to download the mobile app 😑
  • Why does everything need to be an app by the way? Especially when the only advantage the app gives you over the website is that you’re not constantly spammed with messages telling you to use the app… Are you making your website shittier on purpose so I feel like I have to use the app?.. I don’t WANT your app, you can shove it where the sun doesn’t shine.
  • Actually EVERYTHING looks like it’s made for a phone… Like what’s the deal with all those hamburger menus on DESKTOP software? Please just put a regular menu and same me some pointless clicking, it’s not like you’re lacking screen space. I especially hate that those menus can’t be opened from the keyboard like regular menus. You know, “keyboards”? Those things that people on DESKTOPS use?
  • All phones look the same. All laptops look the same. It’s boring as hell.
  • Laptops must be as thin and flimsy as possible. Bonus points if you can’t even fit an ethernet port.
  • I’m so sick of rounded corners everywhere… 😭
  • @[email protected]
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    182 months ago

    Car centric cities by far. Bring back walkable neighborhoods and give me options to move around instead of only being able to be stuck inside a car

  • monovergent 🛠️
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    112 months ago
    • Light and dark modes with nothing in between. Platinum from MacOS and the default look from Windows 95 were crisp and bright without burning out your eyeballs.
    • Wasted screen space. People laugh at Japanese websites for looking too busy, but I’d much rather deal with that than scroll for ages or look for links buried 3 levels deep in a hamburger menu.
    • The idea that everything needs a backlit color LCD screen.
    • Modern standby on laptops. Sure I could just hibernate it, but that’s very inelegant when S3 sleep was perfectly fine before.
    • Glued-together electronics.
    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      For me it’s big phones being the most featureful phones.

      Gimme a small phone with the camera array of the Galaxy Ultra and my wallet it yours

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        12 months ago

        Of course a bigger phone fits more stuff. I dont really care about that very much though. But seems Im not the typical target customer.

  • @[email protected]
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    82 months ago

    Prompting.

    Remember the day where you have to type commands on a terminal to do anything and some guy came up with “button” and “windows” and suddenly you could print yo document with a single click ?

    Oh, cool, let’s bring back the trend of speaking to your computer through a text area !

    Fuck LLM.

  • @[email protected]
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    82 months ago
    • Giant fucking (landing page img|carousel)s
    • Cutesy (error msg|splash screen) illustrations
    • Camera bumps . Wanna lay your phone flat ? Requires case now !
    • This stupid fucking thing :
  • @[email protected]
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    72 months ago

    I’m a graphic designer, so maximalism and antidesign. It’s taking a bit to become more than just a trend, but it’s getting there. I understand minimalism is getting stale, but the answer is not going for something hard to read. Even with proper hierarchy the sheer clash of colors, sizes, etc., will lead to a jumbled mess. Form follows function to make life easier.

    A balance must be struck between maximalism and minimalism.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      62 months ago

      Minimalist web design is making me miss the mess that was the old internet. The terrible designs with dozen of bright elements all assaulting your eyes, the blinking stuff everywhere giving you seizures, the ugly animated GIFs whose pixels you could count, the absence of any coherence for colors and text formatting… It was awful, but at least it was interestingly awful. Each website had it’s own unique flavor of awful. Now it’s convenient, but it’s all the same flavor of boring and bland convenience.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        I see your point, but… I don’t know. Nowadays, attention is a prime commodity. The easier something is to consume, the more people it will reach. And while that doesn’t matter as much in entertainment media, it has to be considered when designing for more important topics. Thus, media has to be designed to be read efficiently.

        I don’t love how media is designed nowadays, precisely because it is monotonous and boring often, but I don’t long for the days when I had to look an entire page over for the bit of information I’m after. A balance can be struck through clear layout design and following trends that respect hierarchy. Maximalism does neither.

        Though, I feel like I have to differentiate artistic media from informative media. Art can go bonkers, in fact art should challenge established tropes, but design should prioritize function over form, keeping in mind there is some room for aesthetics in there.

        Again, I’m approaching this from an efficiency and ease of use point of view.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          22 months ago

          I do get the efficiency point, and it did improve accessibility massively. I don’t want to downplay that. Like not having huge paragraphs of text take the whole width of the screen anymore helped improve readability a lot. Or pages of text over a background image… that was a nightmare. But it would be nice to have efficiency and accessibility without every website looking the same. There has to be a way to make websites look interesting without the design hindering users from reaching the information they want… But I assume that it would require a lot more effort, and that’s not a priority for most websites. I guess the priority isn’t to look interesting anymore but SEO? Maybe it comes from the changing nature of the internet, with big websites getting most of the traffic and replacing everything else? Like having markets with crazy stalls everywhere replaced by malls… I guess it’s easier for a small website made by one person about a topic they are passionate about to take the risk of a creative design than it would be for Facebook to do it.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 months ago

            That’s about it. Clients often have an idea of what they want, inspired by stuff they’ve seen already. It’s just safer to request stuff that already works than innovate. So designers might have more interesting and readable ideas but they end up doing what the client wants anyway. Good way to see this is designer’s online portfolios.

            A good client provides some guidance but offers a fair amount of freedom in regards to exploration, the average client has an idea of what they want already, and the worst kind of client tells you what they want from the go (because most often it just won’t work).

    • @[email protected]OP
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      42 months ago

      Electronics that you can’t even TRY to repair because there are no screws, the case is just glued together. I had to use a flat screwdriver as chisel along with a HAMMER to open up some dead devices like mouse and controller to see what was inside 😑

    • IngeniousRocks (They/She)
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      22 months ago

      I’ve recently determined for myself, specifically for this reason, any devices I want around my home for the future I plan to build myself.

      A project box, a raspberry pi, and a few components can go a really long way.

  • @[email protected]
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    72 months ago

    Corporate Memphis, and I’ll get ahead of the curve, whatever its successor is. Probably some kind of AI-chic.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    The home, back, and switch app buttons on Android being replaced with that bar like on the iPhone.

    I especially miss the back button, swiping from the edge of the screen is nowhere near as ergonomic. It also replaced the ability to reveal the side panel by swiping from the left edge, so now you have to tap the hamburger menu way up at the top left corner of the screen for it, which requires either your other hand or you have to shimmy the phone down your hand until you can reach it.

    Also, when you have a full screen video playing, you have to swipe up once to reveal the bar, and then again to actually close out of the app. That made sense with buttons but why the hell is it still the case with the bar?

    Double tapping the switch app button to switch between the two most recent apps was also more convenient than swiping up to reveal the app manager and dragging the window to the right, and when you want to go to the previous app, whether it’s on the right or left side of the current one seems to depend on how long you’ve been on the app for, which means you can never build up muscle memory since it changes all the time.

    Another case of Google trying to imitate Apple’s UX but seemingly not actually doing any of the usability testing and polishing that Apple does, and generally making it both worse than Apple’s implementation and worse than what was there before.

  • @[email protected]
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    62 months ago

    you’re not complaining about “design trends”, you’re complaining about capitalism.

    everything is touchscreen because it’s cheaper than mechanical buttons.

    all products looks the same because 1. it’s cheaper 2. mass appeal is more profitable than niche, and 3. it’s risk free

    everything’s an app because they can collect data, push notifications, and force you into closed ecosystems.

    laptops are thin because they probably sell more as a lot of people prioritize lightweight and less bulky laptops to carry them around easier. phones are going the other way but when you’re talking laptops it’s kilograms rather than grams so the difference is more important.

    finally rounded corners are probably a design trend, although i am generally in favor of them.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago
    • houses designed as if they were some private plastic surgeon’s office;
    • neopentec churches with black walls.
  • @[email protected]
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    52 months ago

    Flat pack furniture. Everything being reduced to the cheapest to make and cheapest to ship.

  • @[email protected]
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    22 months ago

    Corporate whimsy. I forget what the name coined for it was. It has bubbly oddly proportioned people and pastel colors. As an example.