Flexbox in 5
A concise and interactive way to learn flexbox.

How We Changed the Facebook Friends Icon
Great case study here about how small details matter, and initializing your own projects when you see openings for improvement.

Why Product Thinking is the next big thing in UX Design
Be sure you've pinpointed the right problem before you even start thinking about solutions! So much of my time goes towards understanding a problem, and it takes a lot of restraint to not immediately jump to wireframing too early.

How to Deal with a Small Design Budget
Some great tips here I need to keep in mind. Such as...

No matter your budget, focus on these things: User needs. Good typography and color palettes. And you’ll design a good product.

My Two Years as an Anthropologist on the Photoshop Team

Ethnography deeply informed the Photoshop team’s focus on design. We used it to not only understand trends in design and tools — which shaped development priorities — but ethnography was (and is) also integral to building empathy and connections. These connections resulted in rich feedback loops and user-centered development processes which are continuing to grow and mature.

12 Little-Known CSS Facts
CSS facts you may not have known! Did you know color applies to more than just text?

12 Little-Known CSS Facts (The Sequel)
Even more CSS facts you may not have known. I didn't know you could set the horizontal and vertical radius with border-radius separately - interesting, but I don't know why you'd want to design your border radii like that!

Inside Design School: Texas State University
I look forward to these weekly interviews that InVision does inside design companies and schools.

Great designers understand that design is an ecosystem. We don’t live in a vacuum—an item you make is part of a bigger picture.

Should I focus on a good user experience, or push something out quickly?
My gut response is why does one or the other need to be sacrificed? Understanding that design needs to be a focus early on and you wouldn't have to choose - keep scope small, and know that it doesn't have to be perfect right out of the gate - gather feedback quickly to improve it. However, Jared Spool's answer, plus a link to an article he wrote in the late 90s about this very topic, is insightful.