Great presentation
On a slight tangent, since we are all here...
Does anyone still believe there is a long-term future in traditional UI/UX?
It feels like a lot of attention is still going into landing pages, dashboards, and CRUD apps, while overlooking a bigger shift where fewer people will actually need to interact with those interfaces directly when the same tools can perform the underlying tasks automatically, without much UI at all.
So the bigger question is does UI/UX evolve into something else, or does a large part of it simply disappear?
I might be a bit too early. Recently I started a project and decided to skip all of that and focus to make it more friendly to AI agents and frankly so far it has been great purely from user experience but also what it delivers.
How can it perform tasks automatically? It's not magic, there has to be an UI/UX for interacting with it. Will that UI/UX be more optimized and easier to use is the question. Like would you prefer saying "close window computer" or press alt+f4 or just click on the little cross thing or equivalent. Why are we assuming all AI automagic UI/UX will be better for all tasks?
Is there a long term future in hand-crafted UI/UX? Maybe not.
Is there a future where we still have traditional UX? Absolutely.
I don't want to write a whole dissertation on this topic, so I'm just going to mention that we tried to build AI voice assistants for a decade, and while LLMs have basically solved understanding, they have not solved the UX portion.