22 comments

  • avaer 38 minutes ago
    I've worked on several projects where people looked at the site, which was simple and straight to the point, and people would straight up tell me they didn't take it seriously because it didn't have these performative UI things on it.

    It's like when a Youtuber's audience complains about how they're constantly asking you to subscribe. The reason it happens is because the statistics say it works.

    • theturtletalks 2 minutes ago
      It really comes down to first impression. Your website design is your company’s first impression. If the design is clean, people will believe the product is clean and robust as well. Similar to how people think things that cost more and probably high quality and better overall.

      As for this website, the best component is the ASCII animation in the hero and you can’t even copy that component. In fact, that nice ASCII hero is what gave me a good first impression to go thru all the components.

    • wavemode 15 minutes ago
      I don't think the commentary being made here is that startup websites should not be flashy. Just that, maybe they don't all need to look exactly the same as each other.
      • jsdalton 4 minutes ago
        It seems to me the parent commenter is saying the opposite: looking exactly like each other _is_ the point. It's a form of social signaling, to indicate that a project "belongs" to the in group of high-flying successful AI hype projects.

        Note I'm not arguing that this is a good strategy. But given that so many people follow it I imagine it's not as bad as it appears on the surface.

    • epolanski 26 minutes ago
      Same for clickbait thumbnails, people hate them, and yet don't really click on non clickbaity ones.
      • thewebguyd 21 minutes ago
        In the marketing world this is called revealed preference. This stuff is A/B tested to death. Anyone trying to sell something is best served by watching people's behavior instead of listening to what they say, as the two are often different if not polar opposites.
  • padolsey 54 minutes ago
    The most extreme virtue-signal is to go completely browser-default and have no styling whatsoever. Like lowercasing because your pinky can't be arsed to reach for the shift-key even though you've a billion dollars in series A.
    • psadauskas 29 minutes ago
      I've mostly stopped caring about using using proper capitalization, commas, grammar and spelling in my writing of comments, primarily as a signal that i'm not an llm.
      • nozzlegear 5 minutes ago
        If you turn on HN's "Show Dead" setting, there are tons of LLM-generated comments on stories related to AI. You can see the human(s) behind the LLM trying to fiddle with the style of comment by making them skip proper grammar, capitalization, use or avoid certain phrases, and so on. The biggest tell for LLM content, though, is just the content as a whole: it sounds fake and ungenuine, like it passed through a committee of hostage negotiators to remove the speaker's own attachment/expectations.

        They can configure it to use all lowercase letters, skip em-dashes, make grammar mistakes, stop saying "it's not X, it's Y", or whatever, yet the content itself just has a fake quality to it that makes it stand out, which is why those comments still get flagged IMO.

      • frantathefranta 23 minutes ago
        Claude's "write me a product description like a cool human would" is just using lower-case where it shouldn't be though.
    • Waterluvian 52 minutes ago
      Netscape knows best.
      • ghurtado 16 minutes ago
        Give me Navigator or give me death
    • sph 44 minutes ago
      Ah yes, the jeevacation special
      • arm32 28 minutes ago
        Craziest m'island
    • MrBuddyCasino 49 minutes ago
      Array language proponents also like to do this. In their case I‘ll allow it, it matches the substance.
    • cmrdporcupine 33 minutes ago
      lowercasing everything -- just means

      you're literate smart... poetic; because

      you read e.e.cummings

      and william carlos

      williams

      ...

      fin.

      • arm32 27 minutes ago
        Instructions unclear, am will.i.am
  • tfitz237 1 hour ago
    These all look very professional for (basically) a parody library
    • csomar 38 minutes ago
      What are the odds some companies end up using it for a real product?
    • Boxxed 53 minutes ago
      ...which might just show how predictable and similar all janky startup pages are.
  • grassfedgeek 4 minutes ago
    Adding github link for those who want to use it (I do): https://github.com/vorpus/performativeUI
  • jrflo 1 hour ago
    That ascii lava lamp effect is low key really cool
    • tyleo 22 minutes ago
      Yeah probably my favorite of the bunch too. I bet there’s a fun project to do to make a customizer for that.
    • carlos-menezes 1 hour ago
      Lags the hell out of my browser (Safari) window though.
      • lizhang 1 hour ago
        sorry in advance if this post causes more sites to use that effect
  • eranation 23 minutes ago
    My Claude feels personally attacked.
  • jtbayly 51 minutes ago
    I could see actually using this…
  • Brajeshwar 50 minutes ago
    Many a true word is spoken in jest.
  • yosef123 48 minutes ago
    This needs an additional subscriptions service tier, that's even more performative and even more AI
  • kardianos 43 minutes ago
    Savage and accurate. 100%.
  • erdaltoprak 1 hour ago
    It's very fun and way too polished, thanks!
  • staminade 1 hour ago
    Very funny. Although ironic that this whole library was built with AI.
    • sbarre 41 minutes ago
      Ironic, or appropriate?
      • ghurtado 15 minutes ago
        Ironically appropriate
  • heldrida 1 hour ago
    Spot on "AI Native".
  • cmrdporcupine 45 minutes ago
    NGL I'm going to steal/borrow/leach all sorts of these for my product.

    When in Rome!

  • smhanov 54 minutes ago
    It needs a purple gradient mode.
  • wg0 1 hour ago
    Man... That's satire on a whole another level. What a technical and deep sense of humor.
  • MisterKent 1 hour ago
    Now I can produce slop without AI.
    • sph 37 minutes ago
      Why would you do that, when you can make shit nobody needs 10x faster with AI
      • hyperhello 12 minutes ago
        The author should have AI set up a simple deployment to EC2 and Azure and make an endless series of semantically meaningless AI companies with web sites and submit them everywhere. The web sites should also do this themselves.
  • igurss 1 hour ago
    Nice UI quality
  • ajpaulson 1 hour ago
    Lmao!!! Awesome
  • imafish 1 hour ago
    I heard you like AI slop...
  • utopiah 26 minutes ago
    Neat, opened an issue there for a finicky bit of code that'd help me quite a bit. /s
  • marknutter 43 minutes ago
    Yawn. This is just bootstrap all over again. So what if people who don't have design skills can now create pleasant looking websites?
    • ghurtado 11 minutes ago
      The thing about humor is that you don't have to tell people when you don't get a joke, you can just quietly continue to live your life while you wait for your next chance to be temporarily happy.