Top
Best
New

Posted by meetpateltech 11 hours ago

Claude Design(www.anthropic.com)
Related: https://x.com/flomerboy/status/2045162321589252458 (https://xcancel.com/flomerboy/status/2045162321589252458)
794 points | 531 commentspage 2
weinzierl 9 hours ago|
"create polished visual work like designs, prototypes, slides, one-pagers, and more."

I use Opus to generate Typst for that and I'm already pretty happy with that approach. It gives me a degree of control I do not have with other methods, because

1. Typst is really powerful

2. Opus is really good at surgically modifying Typst

I basically never look at the Typst code for this. Telling Opus visually what I want changed is usually good enough.

moelf 9 hours ago||
how does Opus see the output? via HTML (which Typst can output) or visual tokens?
ossa-ma 9 hours ago||
How does it compare to LaTeX?
shrinks99 7 hours ago||
It compiles almost instantly which makes this visual design by Claude instruction viable. That alone is pretty neat.

It can't render all your math in exactly the same way. If you need it to do that, it may not be for you.

weinzierl 7 hours ago||
It's so fast that the first using it I thought something must have gone wrong, and that was a 40 page document.
stephencoyner 3 hours ago||
The labs team absolutely cooked with this. As a designer who's been using Claude Code a lot to make better prototypes, I still go back to mockups for comparing many iterations, collecting precise feedback with comments, and documenting decisions for decks or sharing with other departments like product marketing. This seems to solve for all of these use cases (or at least start to).

It's also just a beautiful product. The interaction model, styling and integrations via exporting is all super thoughtful

florakel 6 hours ago||
For me it was the missing piece when working with Claude Code. I am a PM by formation so neither do I know how to design nor do I know how to code but I am pretty good at describing what I want and why. I just played with Claude Design for a while and it made it really easy to explore different solutions, reorganize the interface, adjust little detail with the "comment" function, move buttons around, etc. Then export to Claude code including the design system, and I spend way less time writing a spec and can focus more on corner cases and the ugly details. 2 years ago I still had to hire a freelance designer and a developer for small projects, now for the fraction of the cost I am totally independent and can iterate as much as I want. We always mention that "the design is not unique" or "the software architecture is not clean and the code to verbose" - I get it I managed Series C startup product teams before I got sick of the VC shit show. Now I am working mostly with lifestyle businesses and SMBs that have the ambition to be profitable - and average is good enough for them. They gain access to custom designed software for specific use cases which was completely out of reach for them 3 years ago. Custom solutions meant working with mediocre, overpriced agencies creating "solutions" with Wordpress. Anything I can do with the Claude stack is on higher level at a fraction of the cost. And as long as it works and looks good those business don't give a ** about unique design and scalable software engineering.
ej88 10 hours ago||
This is cool!

Seems like Claude is actually building almost like a layered Figma wireframe that you can do fine grained adjustments afterwards (e.g. adjust font size).

Interesting that Canva provided a quote of support. I'm not familiar with the differentiation, but it seems like this will directly siphon customers from Canva, right?

npilk 10 hours ago|
There's an "export to Canva" button in Claude Design, so perhaps they're hoping this will be another entry point for new users, or that they'll be able to "lock in" as the default design software for Claude users.
dannyw 6 hours ago||
(I lead AI Products at Canva :)

Our mission is to empower the world to design, and we believe in making Canva available in every place where ideas begin. Being the most interoperable platform creates mutually better products, more value for community, and more value and growth for our company.

We've been working closely with Anthropic for many years, and we see this as complementary. Our MCP, integrations, and plugins have already introduced millions of new users to the full power of Canva, and we're excited to continue doubling down here.

roelb 6 hours ago||
Let's not fool ourselves: their goal isn't to build a design tool, it's another training tool for a field where training data is hard to collect. We collectively reinforce predictions to sharpen the models. The pattern is clear across all their products. This is training for future one-shot generative UIs. UIs are already generative; this will scale that up to a world where applications are mostly UI-less.
mbesto 5 hours ago||
Why on earth is Canva parternering here? This is literally eating their world.
saxelsen 4 hours ago||
Agree, but maybe they worry they'll be even more irrelevant if they don't partner? Keep your enemies close...
lukev 2 hours ago|||
I would bet that Canva's bet is that companies will always want a "last mile" of manual control, even if only for the Queen's Duck effect. If Canva is the default, zero friction path for that, great for them.

The alternative is to not hop on the AI bandwagon, or run an "also ran" AI story, and both those scenarios (I expect) game out worse given the current zeitgeist.

pdabbadabba 4 hours ago||
Because it will eat their world either way?
psadri 10 hours ago||
What’s interesting here is that with AI, all our interfaces should evolve away from previous generation rigid forms / buttons / tables etc. towards something more fluid / dynamic / “natural”. Yet all the AI coding is geared towards producing more of the former.
xpct 8 hours ago||
Do you have examples of "natural" UI that you like?
psadri 1 hour ago|||
Most of the software we interact with is at the end of the day some db tables, queries to read/write, and some ui to read/write. There have been so many times I wished I could just do my own db joins on the underlying db to get the views I wanted. But I can’t - because the app has pre-defined ui/query paths.

With AI, I should be able to ask for things the product designers didn’t anticipate or left out and the system could query, create ui on the fly, etc…

apt-apt-apt-apt 3 hours ago|||
Mind-reading brain implants. That's what he wants.
cindyllm 2 hours ago||
[dead]
cmrx64 8 hours ago|||
i think of them as tiers of expertise— need to master the basics of structure and form before the robot has the learned representations to competently model user interactions with more fluid instantiations (by downprojecting into the overlearned fixed-semantics)
jayd16 10 hours ago||
Why would a remix engine move away from what it was trained on?

Why would we want to move away from hard fought UX design lessons? Dynamic and fluid UX is infuriating.

preston-kwei 3 hours ago||
I think UI quality is going to stop being as important when anybody can just generate an "average" UI that is good enough in minutes.

Ultimately, this really just shifts the focus towards product design and ideation rather than UI design.

davebren 4 hours ago||
Remember, every product they release expands the scope of their non-compete clause, and they like their lawsuits.
sbszllr 10 hours ago|
It's interesting how OpenAI and Anthropic effectively mass dumped a bunch of similar features in the last two days.

I wonder what other features they're cooking right now.

fassssst 9 hours ago||
It’s because they embrace their coding models to ship new things at light speed.
irishcoffee 10 hours ago||
I think that's the wrong question. What kind of shadow spy network must exist around all these companies such that they all happen to be working on the same features at the same time.
embedding-shape 10 hours ago|||
> What kind of shadow spy network must exist around all these companies such that they all happen to be working on the same features at the same time.

Stuff like that happened even before the invention of the telephone, humans within the same geographic location is even more predicable, so surely this shouldn't come as a surprise.

clayhacks 9 hours ago|||
Yeah the spy network is just all these people living in a 7 mile radius of each other (San Francisco) and have lots of overlap in social circles
irishcoffee 7 hours ago|||
Who said I was surprised? :)
embedding-shape 7 hours ago||
I mean your initial question kind of implies something that is likely to be the wrong answer, so sounds like at least someone could potentially be surprised by that :)
jonlucc 10 hours ago||||
Frequently, two movies with very similar concepts drop the same year. Is that because they're spying, or because the companies make decisions in similar ways based on similar input information?
sbszllr 10 hours ago||||
It's possible and even likely there's industrial espionage going on. But imo, you don't need that. I've worked in cutting edge industries, and even when you don't know what your competition is doing, there are usually only so many logical next steps.
xpe 9 hours ago||
This. / Who remembers the "birth" of crowdfunding? Why did so much seem to happen at all once? The most likely explanation imo is that it was "in the air" -- we share culture and ideas. These ideas don't have to be stolen to co-occur... quite the opposite.
xpe 10 hours ago|||
The human brain strikes again. It is built into our cognitive machinery to look for patterns and naively ascribe causation. We're not rational beings that sometimes mess up. We're a clusterf--k of cognitive biases all the way down.*

Cool pattern! Sure, maybe there is something there.** And/or maybe our brain is doing "conspiracy theorizing lite". Its all on the same spectrum -- the same flawed cognitive machinery trying to operate in a weird modern world quite different from where we came from.

A better way: write out your favorite hypothesis. But don't stop there... keep going... write out many hypotheses. Then find ways to test them. To tap into our best selves, I recommend The Scout Mindset (book). Here is an infographic summary of part of it: https://imgur.com/qN31PX8

Probably not a better way: float one's first gut feels to the Internet phrased as i.e. the better question and feed empty calories to our pattern-craving brains. There is reason some of our brain functions are considered higher order.

* Maybe I'm overstating this. Let me know? I want to read Rationality and the Reflective Mind by Keith Stanovich (https://academic.oup.com/book/5930) as a counterpoint to the usual suspects (such as Tversky & Kahneman)

** But what is there. What kind of pattern? What kind(s) of causation could be at work? See Judea Pearl's "ladder of causation". Nice write-up here: https://samuel-book.github.io/causal_inference_notebook/pear...

More comments...