TLDR Design 2026-03-30
Mac Pro Discontinued 🪦, Gemini Cohere Audio Upgrade 🤖, Grok Video Strategy 📹
Apple confirms Mac Pro is discontinued after two decades (5 minute read)
Apple has discontinued the Mac Pro, ending its long-standing tower workstation line and shifting pro users toward the more compact and powerful Mac Studio, whose Apple silicon performance now covers most professional needs. The move reflects Apple's broader strategy of prioritizing integrated, efficient hardware over modular expandability, with Thunderbolt handling most expansion needs while specialized workflows (like CUDA) move to non-Mac systems.
Elon Musk's xAI Goes All-in On Video Generation as OpenAI Retreats to Enterprise (2 minute read)
OpenAI shut down its Sora video app and developer APIs, citing unsustainable compute costs, low user retention, and legal liabilities, pivoting instead to enterprise software and coding agents. xAI is moving in the opposite direction, leveraging its built-in distribution through X and financial backing from SpaceX — which merged with xAI in a $1.25 trillion deal — to absorb the high inference costs that sank Sora. Unlike OpenAI's standalone app approach, xAI's Grok Imagine can be embedded natively into X's feed, where short-form video content already thrives.
Google, Cohere Launch New Audio AI Models (5 minute read)
Google and Cohere launched new AI models optimized for audio processing: Google's Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, designed for customer service automation, and Cohere's model focused on speech transcription. Gemini 3.1 Flash Live can detect user emotions, process images alongside speech, and scored 90.8% on benchmarks, while Cohere Transcribe achieved a 5.42% word error rate across multiple languages. Both models offer significantly improved performance over their predecessors and are available for companies to integrate into their applications.
The Creative Infinite (4 minute read)
AI represents "the Creative Infinite" - an unprecedented ability to have something exist within minutes of its description. This technology has completely eroded traditional barriers to creation, allowing people to translate their natural thoughts directly into creative outputs. Rather than replacing existing creative tools, AI compounds with them to exponentially expand human creative potential in ways we haven't fully grasped yet.
Design Debt is Now as Dangerous as Technical Debt (6 minute read)
Design debt poses a growing threat to products, yet receives none of the systematic tracking that technical debt does. In AI products specifically, poor design choices carry higher stakes: presenting probabilistic outputs as definitive answers distorts user beliefs and prevents model correction, while fragmented team ownership lets problems quietly compound at the seams. Tackling this requires executive-level commitment to auditing design decisions with the same rigor applied to engineering — before the cost of moving forward becomes too high to bear.
Taste is not a feature (13 minute read)
In an era where AI makes creating fast and effortless, the key differentiator is no longer production but taste—the learned ability to judge what is meaningful, appropriate, and worth making. Drawing on thinkers like David Hume and Pierre Bourdieu, taste is framed as a discipline developed through exposure, time, and critical reflection—especially during the often-skipped “incubation” phase of creativity—without which output becomes shallow and repetitive. As a result, value now lies in discernment, context, and judgment, which cannot be automated or rushed.
Good Product Design: What Actually Makes it Work (8 minute read)
Good product design communicates its function clearly through form alone, making users feel understood before they even read instructions. It meets five criteria, including functional coherence (alignment between promises and delivery) and low friction (minimal resistance between user intention and action). The best products earn trust instantly by making their purpose and operation immediately obvious through thoughtful design decisions.
AI in Product Operations: How AI Boosts Workflow Efficiency (18 minute read)
AI is increasingly being used in product operations to automate repetitive tasks, improve decision-making, and free up teams for higher-impact work. Technologies ranging from generative AI and RPA to predictive analytics and conversational chatbots can be applied across data analysis, workflow automation, and cross-team communication. While the benefits include faster task completion and scalable operations, organizations must also navigate risks such as data privacy concerns, AI model bias, and change management challenges.
Sunday's 'Playful Precision': a robotics brand designed to give you your time back (6 minute read)
Sunday's Memo is a home robot designed to automate everyday tasks using AI that learns directly from human demonstrations via its Skill Capture Glove. Working with Moniker, the company built a brand focused on simplicity and trust—balancing advanced technology with a calm, approachable identity—emphasizing real-life usefulness over hype, which helped drive strong early interest, rapid waitlist growth, and major investment.
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