
Drunk CSS: An Empathy Nudge, Not Accessibility
A deliberately inaccessible “Drunk” CSS mode is an empathy nudge—not a substitute—for real accessibility testing with disabled users.

A deliberately inaccessible “Drunk” CSS mode is an empathy nudge—not a substitute—for real accessibility testing with disabled users.

A curated gallery to push designers toward truly mobile-first web design.
NotebookLM proves that a dynamic, three‑panel, AI‑native UI—grounded in Inputs → Chat → Outputs—can unify reading, conversation, and creation while scaling fast through user‑driven iteration.

Use 'your' when the product talks, 'my' when the user talks—and drop pronouns when you can.
A mobile-optimized app lets you swipe to label skin lesion images as concerned, not concerned, or unsure.

Animate only when it helps—and keep it fast; otherwise, don’t animate.