2026-03-08 22:42:07
Especially for those not familiar with the process of design, it can be tempting to see things like discovery and wireframing as obstacles to be cleared before you get to the fun part, designing the visual identity. Unfortunately, many designers are also guilty of this!
Nic Chan
Nic's article makes an important point about the value of user experience; a value I'm seeing eroded by the prodigious use of LLMs.
Tools like Google Stitch will wireframe your app for you from a prompt allowing anyone who can describe a website in words to bypass years of experience.
But this is a box ticking exercise; a step on an ideal process that, in many minds, stands between you and "delivering value".
The purpose of wireframing is to uncover complexity early. To do that you need to interrogate your designs, understand the trade offs, and defend your decisions.
If AI did it for you, you can't do any of those things. If you rush the wireframe phase or the architecture diagrams or the technical spec, you don't understand your product.
2026-03-08 20:44:05
Happy International Women's Day to all women
I sat down next to a woman who was reading on the train and pulled out my own Kindle. She glanced at it, said "snap!", and clinked hers against mine like wine glasses.

blossom-against-blue-sky season – where everyone takes the same hopeful shot and offers it like proof we’ve made it through winter.
DW, walknotes
We had clients in the office this week for a workshop. This is a novelty because we usually travel to meet them for this sort of thing.
Lovely clients, relaxed atmosphere, great workshop. I always feel one of the most important aspects of a workshop like this is getting the participants relaxed and having a good time; create a safe space and get honest answers.
Honesty is often the only way to affect real change.
I logged four new "lifers" in Merlin this week; birds I haven't heard before.
The baritone caw of a rook, a mistle thrush, a greylag goose, and the staccato drumming of a spotted woodpecker over in the wood.
As the mornings get lighter, the more voices in the dawn chorus.
Women who did what they liked instead of what other people wished were often accused of witchcraft because only a witch would be so defiant
Christina Henry, _The Mermaid
2026-03-06 05:42:06

Once there was a mermaid called Amelia who could never be content in the sea, a mermaid who longed to know all the world and all its wonders, and so she came to live on land.
Once there was a man called P. T. Barnum, a man who longed to make his fortune by selling the wondrous and miraculous, and there is nothing more miraculous than a real mermaid.
I am not familiar with the true story of PT Barnum and the Feejee Mermaid but, from the little I know of Barnum, this fictitious retelling of the story from the point of view of the mermaid herself feels highly accurate.
Like previous books by Henry that I've read such as "The Lost Boy", it seems Henry has a knack for putting a believable yet fantastical slant on a story so it blends seamlessly with reality.
I felt so much for Amelia; I was rooting for her as she tried to navigate a world so alien. Much of human society was observed as ridiculous through her eyes and, honestly?, hard agree on all of it!
If you've enjoyed any of Henry's other books, there's no reason to not pick this one up too.
2026-03-02 03:29:39
The dog is lying in a parallelogram of golden sunshine streaming through the patio doors across the tiled floor of the kitchen. Her eyes are closed and is still as death; only her gently heaving chest tells me she is alive. That and the way she is immediately behind me, awake and expectant, when I crinkle a packet.
Last week's fever boiled into bacterial tonsillitis so now I'm on antibiotics 😭
Grateful I live in an area where I can get a doctor's appointment!
Politics at work has, once again, got in the way of delivering something useful to genuinely help people. It's really quite disheartening.
I had to write a Point of View report this week on domain name strategy and URL structures. Half of it was pulled together from my own notes on the subject collected over years. I should probably write them up and publish them here. I have a fair amount of documentation like this, I realise!
Yes, the daffodils are in full flower. And, sure, I can see blossom on some of the trees. But it's still too early to go and do gardening.
2026-03-01 17:29:50
Happy March!
Here are a few photos from my phone from the last month with neither rhyme nor reason to the theme.




2026-03-01 15:28:35
Last year, Robert Birming called for us all to share "The text that appealed to you most during the month, for whatever reason." and, thus, Fabruary was born.
My pick for this year is Sophie Koonin's "Stop generating, start thinking".
Sophie is a much better writer than me and has articulated a lot of my thoughts and feelings in this article.
Even though I am not at the coal face of writing code anymore, I am responsible for ensuring our clients' digital output isn't dog shit.
I have spent a lot of the last few years watching "AI" (which AI do you mean?) gain a footing in the industry and trying to work out what that means for me as a technologist.
What does my work look like now? What does it look like when the bubble bursts?
Sophie's article has provoked further thought and reflection — surely the goal of any decent writing!
Ultimately, I feel (like Sophie) that the majority of my job is thinking and, crucially, understanding. That's not something that will be outsourced to machines just yet.