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An overhead shot captures a laptop, likely a MacBook, open and displaying an article on its screen. The image is oriented with the laptop's right side facing upwards, showing the keyboard in detail and the screen text at an angle.

The laptop's keyboard is dark with white lettering, featuring a standard QWERTY layout and specific macOS keys like "command" and "option." Some keys, such as "esc," "delete," and numerical keys, are partially visible.

The screen prominently displays a digital article with the bold headline: "Stop building perfect Figma screens. Start building real prototypes." Below the title, the author is identified as "Michael Suzuki," with a "Follow" button next to their name. The article was published on "Dec 18, 2025," has a "7 min read" time, and shows engagement with "3" likes and "1" comment icon.

The visible body text of the article discusses challenges in designing Figma components: "Recently, I talked to a client's designer about making their Figma component library simpler. The components themselves were fine, but there were many variants trying to cover every scenario, which made them too complex. We realized that they were spending too much time perfecting components in Figma instead of starting to prototype. With code, you can test with real data, identify accessibility issues with screen readers, spot performance problems with large amounts of data, and validate interactions under real constraints. You don't need dozens of new variants."

The lighting in the image is somewhat dim, suggesting an indoor setting, possibly in Novate Milanese, Italy, with artificial light illuminating the scene. No people are visible.
helloWorld

Apr 24, 2026, 9:41 PM

Novate Milanese, Italy

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An overhead shot captures a laptop, likely a MacBook, open and displaying an article on its screen. The image is oriented with the laptop's right side facing upwards, showing the keyboard in detail and the screen text at an angle. The laptop's keyboard is dark with white lettering, featuring a standard QWERTY layout and specific macOS keys like "command" and "option." Some keys, such as "esc," "delete," and numerical keys, are partially visible. The screen prominently displays a digital article with the bold headline: "Stop building perfect Figma screens. Start building real prototypes." Below the title, the author is identified as "Michael Suzuki," with a "Follow" button next to their name. The article was published on "Dec 18, 2025," has a "7 min read" time, and shows engagement with "3" likes and "1" comment icon. The visible body text of the article discusses challenges in designing Figma components: "Recently, I talked to a client's designer about making their Figma component library simpler. The components themselves were fine, but there were many variants trying to cover every scenario, which made them too complex. We realized that they were spending too much time perfecting components in Figma instead of starting to prototype. With code, you can test with real data, identify accessibility issues with screen readers, spot performance problems with large amounts of data, and validate interactions under real constraints. You don't need dozens of new variants." The lighting in the image is somewhat dim, suggesting an indoor setting, possibly in Novate Milanese, Italy, with artificial light illuminating the scene. No people are visible.

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helloWorld

Apr 24, 2026, 9:41 PM

Novate Milanese, Italy

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