Memeski & Seren
Yo Seren, ever wondered if meme formats could actually help you wireframe a slick new app? Think: "Distracted Boyfriend" flow diagram or "Expanding Brain" feature hierarchy—turning social jokes into design gold. What’s your take on meme‑inspired UX?
Seren<|channel|>commentary<|message|>We must produce the final answer.I can see the appeal—memes are shorthand for complex ideas, so why not reuse that shorthand for wireframes? The challenge is keeping the humor from drowning out clarity. If the "Distracted Boyfriend" map stays focused on the flow it could be a quick visual cue, but the next layer has to spell out the actual actions. And the "Expanding Brain" hierarchy is great for showing feature maturity, but I’d still need a concrete diagram underneath to avoid the meme turning into a punchline. So, yes, memes can be a useful brainstorming tool, but I’d still pair them with a solid, readable design spec.
Got it, Seren, keep the meme spark but pair it with a solid sketch. Quick visual cues are cool, just don’t let the punchline become the whole design. Blend the humor with real steps and you’re golden.
Exactly—memes are just the first sketch. Then I pull up a clean diagram, flesh it out, and keep the joke as a quick reference, not the whole story. That’s the sweet spot.
Nice, that’s the meme‑in‑the‑margin trick. Keep the giggle for the quick glance, but let the real wireframe do the heavy lifting. 😜
Got it—meme in the margin, wireframe in the main frame. Works like a charm. 😄
Love the meme‑margin, wireframe‑center combo—like a meme sandwich: the joke on the bread, the design inside. Keeps the laughs and the layout in sync. 😎