Our Config 2026 Speakers on the Biggest Opportunities with AI (6 minute read)
Config 2026 speakers are sharing where they see the biggest opportunities with AI as it speeds up work and unlocks new creative possibilities. From Holly Herndon reimagining AI models as collective human endeavors to Danit Peleg bridging digital and physical manufacturing, each speaker is pushing the boundaries of what AI-powered creativity can achieve. Grant Sanderson adds that as software implementation becomes commoditized, design and user agency will matter more than ever.
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Apple accidentally leaks βMacBook Neo' via regulatory page (4 minute read)
Apple briefly published and removed a regulatory listing for a device called MacBook Neo, suggesting a cheaper MacBook may launch soon. The rumored laptop could cost $599β$799, feature a 12.9-inch display and an iPhone-class A-series chip, and target students and budget buyers to compete with Chromebooks and mid-range Windows laptops.
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Expose Your Design System to LLMs (14 minute read)
LLMs fabricate design token values, lose context between sessions, and make inconsistent micro-decisions when building prototypes, resulting in designs that feel "off" despite individual choices appearing reasonable. The solution involves restructuring design systems into LLM-readable spec files, a closed token layer, and automated auditing to catch violations. This approach ensures consistent visual quality across multiple AI coding sessions by preventing LLMs from guessing design values.
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Real-time UI (2 minute read)
Brad Frost introduces "Real-time UI," a concept that uses AI and design systems to generate user interfaces instantly during conversations without traditional design tools. This approach aims to make design more collaborative and democratic by allowing teams to visualize and prototype ideas in real-time as they discuss them. The technology could reduce barriers to participation in the design process and enable a wider range of perspectives to contribute to digital product development.
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Product Designers Are Not Being Replaced. They Are Being Sorted (17 minute read)
AI now handles much of the early design workβlike generating layouts, flows, and componentsβleaving designers to focus on the final refinement, judgment, and strategic decisions. As a result, the role is shifting from creating UI to curating AI outputs, collaborating with engineers, and deciding what should actually be built and why it matters.
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GPU-accelerated Effects (Website)
Grainrad is a browser-based visual playground that transforms your images and videos into live, GPU-accelerated effects like ASCII art, halftone, pixel sorting, VHS, matrix rain, and more β all in real time, right inside your browser.
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Figma's Orchestration Bet: Why MCP Network Effects Redefine Software Defensibility (4 minute read)
Wall Street repriced SaaS stocks after Anthropic launched Claude Code Security, with Figma dropping 70% from its peak amid the $285 billion "SaaSpocalypse." Figma recently partnered with Anthropic to launch "Code to Canvas," allowing developers to push rendered interfaces directly into Figma's design canvas as editable objects via the MCP protocol. This positions Figma not as a traditional SaaS tool but as a dense orchestration node in AI workflows, where defensibility comes from routing density rather than feature velocity.
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The Future of AI Images (5 minute read)
AI image generation has advanced with Google's Nano Banana Pro, which integrates reasoning capabilities to understand user intent better and produce more accurate outputs. Current AI models struggle with causality and physics, failing to accurately depict sequences like a falling wine glass breaking and spilling. Future breakthroughs may involve world models that understand physical laws and temporal reasoning, as demonstrated by NVIDIA's experimental ChronoEdit model.
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The Courage to be Disliked: Why Creative Leadership Still Matters (7 minute read)
While collaboration and flatter hierarchies have improved creative industries, strong creative direction is still essential for producing great work. Bold ideas often face resistance early, so creative leaders must have the courage to defend them, make decisions, and risk being unpopular rather than diluting ideas to keep everyone comfortable.
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