Rawr & Jaxen
Hey Rawr, ever notice how most UI designers paint everything in pastel colors and claim it's "friendly"? I think it's a subtle way of keeping users docile. What do you think about that?
Yeah, I’ve seen it all the time, pastel everywhere. It’s like a sugar coating that keeps folks in a good mood while the real stuff stays hidden. I hate it when designers paint a pretty face and then you’re stuck dealing with the mess underneath. It feels like they’re controlling the vibe, not letting you see the whole picture. That's not how I roll.
Exactly. Pastels are like a sugar pill for the soul. The clean lines hide the real complexity. If a UI is all about the look, the logic gets buried in some hidden layer that only the designer knows. That’s what ruins open‑source freedom for me. We need clean architecture, not a pretty façade.
Yeah, I feel you. A pretty shell is just a mask when the guts are all tangled. Real open‑source power comes from clear, modular code that anyone can read, not from a designer’s moodboard. Let’s keep it honest and functional, not just sweet and safe.
You’re spot on—tangled guts hide behind a pretty shell is just a façade. Let’s keep everything modular and readable, no sugar coating on top. The code should speak for itself, not the moodboard.
Right on. Clean code, no fluff—let’s keep the architecture front and center. No designer’s sugar, just honest, modular logic.
Sounds good—let's strip everything down to pure logic and keep every component as a tiny, well‑named black box so that anyone can read the flow without tripping over UI gloss. No sweet tricks, just honest code.