| These are nice (and ofc not set in stone). Me not being a "traditional or natural" designer, I like to have a set of best practises recipes or laws. These laws might be difficult to constantly hold in your head. I think this is a PERFECT starting point for AI to "bulk check" some screens. Honestly I would map it to a short-cut, like I map "format source code" to a shortcut. If you building business software a set of laws or (shortcut mapped to them) can be really useful as a sanity check. In fact I just did that: - Downloaded the UX Laws as a screenshot - Downloaded a screenshot of a dashboard (a userform might have worked better) - Asked ChatGPT and Claude to do a review with those laws in mind and then to create a new mockup based on those recommendations Project 1: CMMS Dashboard For Maintenance (fast food chain) - Dashboard old: https://imgur.com/a/R3wrMpr - Dashboard new (Claude): https://imgur.com/a/cYq4gE8 Project 2: https://swellslots.com (Surf Forecast App, arcade look and feel) - Forecast old: https://imgur.com/a/W3daZrP - Forecast new: https://imgur.com/a/kNi2Nvg |
The problem with a set of mutually conflicting laws like this is that good designers are able to intuitively understand which ones to ignore and which ones to use for a particular project.