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A breakdown of the hardware, software, and gear I rely on for design, development, and staying organized.
Tactile, hot-swappable, and surprisingly well-built. I use Gateron Browns because I like the sound of productivity without actually doing any work.
It’s not pretty, but it’s pixel-perfect. Crisp text, accurate color, and no scaling weirdness — basically, the closest thing to a Retina display outside of Apple’s lineup.
Ergonomic, multi-device, and smooth as hell. The thumb scroll alone is worth the price. Feels like cheating when I use it in Figma.
For the ideas that never make it past paper. Minimal, tactile, and somehow more “real” than typing. Half my best concepts start here and never leave.
A small, wood-and-leather charging dock that feels more intentional than plastic clutter. It keeps my desk looking like I’m more organized than I am.
Still unbeatable for sketching ideas quickly, especially when I want to escape the grid for a bit. Pen and surface feel natural, which is weirdly rare in 2025.
Not quite a whiteboard, not quite a design tool — but ideal for early-stage thinking, rough flows, and quick alignment without opening Slack.
It’s the center of everything — UI design, prototyping, collaboration, even documentation sometimes. If Figma goes down, so does half the internet (and my workflow).
Perfect for async design feedback. I record walkthroughs for handoff or explain flows without hopping on yet another call. Saves hours a week.
When I want to play with 3D elements without touching Blender. Surprisingly intuitive and way easier to bring dimensionality into UI concepts.
My go-to when I need a second brain while coding. Whether it’s refactoring, debugging, or just writing cleaner logic, Claude helps me think through it without slowing down. It’s like pair programming without the small talk.
Lightweight, fast, and endlessly customizable. I’ve tried other editors, but I always come back to VS Code. It’s where design meets dev, and my config is basically part of my personality at this point.
For capturing, annotating, and recording screen content without opening a million apps. It makes screenshots feel like a design tool.
My catch-all workspace for notes, planning, and project docs. It’s where half-baked ideas go to mature — or to die quietly in a folder I’ll never open again.
Spotlight, but way smarter. I use it for launching apps, running scripts, toggling system settings, and managing my clipboard. It’s basically my design sidekick.
The only to-do app I’ve stuck with longer than a month. Clean UI, no fluff, and just enough structure to keep my day from collapsing.
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