Avsnitt

  • Restock by No-Code Supply Co. | Ep. 06 | Made by hand

    Opus can one-shot shader language now, and that changes what a small team can build. Ilya Kroogman, founder of The Digital Panda, walks through what comes out of that unlock: gobo light maps, glass refraction on a product hero, fur and grass built from splines instead of meshes, a paint-on-an-object deformer for giving a panda a haircut. The catch is knowing when to ship it. A shader only earns its place when it serves the end user and the business goal, which is why financial clients get clean logins and animated illustrations get saved for the brands that actually want them.

    The bigger idea is imperfection as a trust signal. Randomization, hand-drawn strokes, and the rough edges people read as real are exactly what a model defaults away from. As WebGPU and HTML in Canvas mature, the browser keeps moving toward a low-level operating system, the shareable link keeps replacing the static file, and the work that holds its value is the work a human chose to make by hand.

    Resources & Links:

    The Digital Panda https://www.thedigitalpanda.comIlya Kroogman https://www.linkedin.com/in/ilyakrShadertoy https://www.shadertoy.comcables.gl https://cables.glThree.js https://threejs.orgRive https://rive.appLottie https://lottiefiles.comActive Theory https://activetheory.netPaul Scherrer Institute https://www.scholtysik.ch/projekte/paul-scherrer-institut-psi.htmlHTMLBin https://htmlbin.devhere.now https://here.nowLinear https://linear.app

    No-Code Supply Co. https://www.nocodesupply.co

    Corey Moen https://www.coreymoen.com

    Matthew P Munger https://www.matthewpmunger.com

  • Restock by No-Code Supply Co. | Ep. 05 | Not My Type


    Typography is the foundation of web design, and it deserves more than a last-minute font pick. Nathan Huening joins to cover the fundamentals: letter anatomy, typefaces vs. fonts, type foundries, variable fonts, and why starting with type means starting with the message. There's also a typography quiz, a roundup of font tools and resources worth bookmarking, and a look at what great magazine typography still has to teach the web.


    Before the type talk: the barefoot developer movement and what it means to build software for a small audience, or just yourself. The tools available right now change the question from "can I build it?" to "what will I build?" and that's worth thinking through.

    Resources & Links:

    Find all the links mentioned in the description of the YouTube version of the podcast.
    https://youtu.be/hqvLIdcm_vA

    Nathan Huening https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathan-ftw/
    No-Code Supply Co. https://www.nocodesupply.co
    Corey Moen https://www.coreymoen.com
    Matthew P Munger https://www.matthewpmunger.com

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  • Restock by No-Code Supply Co. | Ep. 04 | Free to play

    Embedded mini-games inside marketing sites, why now? Play feels like the most human thing a site can offer and attention is a luxury.

    Resources & Links:

    The Horseless CodebaseMuseum of MoneyFlecto 404Borraginol TownUtopia TokyoBruno SimonNeal.funManyChat BurnMailchimp Dumpling DeliveryMade by AnalogueStripe.devCode with ClaudeChampions for Good ClubStripe.com

    No-Code Supply Co. https://www.nocodesupply.co

    Corey Moen https://www.coreymoen.com

    Matthew P Munger https://www.matthewpmunger.com

  • Restock by No-Code Supply Co. | Ep. 03 | Let It Sit

    Matt Evans built OG Sorted, a Webflow app for bulk-assigning Open Graph images across an entire site, during a quiet morning before his kids woke up. What Claude Code couldn't do was replace the settling time: that pause where edge cases surface and decisions mature.

    The speed of building with AI quietly removes the friction that used to do useful work. Matt shipped with a bug live, watched the likes roll in, and had to pull it back. The lesson wasn't to slow down, it was to build the pause back in intentionally.

    Resources & Links:

    Solo TermShip StudioClaude CodeCursorDexOG SortedOG KitBanner BearMastLumosSmall Medium LargeLightning CSS

    Matt Evans https://www.fidoandpatch.com

    No-Code Supply Co. https://www.nocodesupply.co

    Corey Moen https://www.coreymoen.com

    Matthew P Munger https://www.matthewpmunger.com

  • Restock by No-Code Supply Co. | Ep. 02 | Slot Together

    Alessia Sannazzaro built BLOCKS out of a real constraint: a client with hundreds of pages who wanted maximum layout variety without a technical team. Open components, closed components, slots, variants, the class-name cheat sheet that almost worked.

    The whole evolution is here, from the pre-variants version of BLOCKS to where it stands now. Marketing teams are asking for design systems in a way they weren't five years ago, and the real question is whether the system you build is one they'll actually use.

    Handoff, retainers, empowering clients to do more themselves, and why trust is the actual foundation of a long-term client relationship. Also: a wish list of Webflow component features, including variant-conditional props and default components in slots.

    Resources & Links:

    BLOCKS by Code & WanderBuilding The Next Web with Corey Moen from Anthropic

    Alessia Sannazzaro https://www.linkedin.com/in/alessia-sannazzaro/

    No-Code Supply Co. https://www.nocodesupply.co

    Corey Moen https://www.coreymoen.com

    Matthew P Munger https://www.matthewpmunger.com

  • Restock by No-Code Supply Co. | Ep. 01 | Good Friction

    Friction gets a bad rap. But sticky friction, the kind that makes you stop, think, and feel the weight of what you built, is what keeps critical thinking alive when everything else pushes you to automate it away. It shows up as checkpoints, guardrails, and forcing functions that keep the thinking in the process.

    Figma beat Sketch by removing the right friction (file sharing, collaboration) and keeping the creative resistance intact. Git works the same way. Using AI for writing still works best when the hard thinking happens upfront and the tool handles execution, not ideas. Also: text-box-trim getting closer, CSS masonry hitting Safari via grid lanes, and Easing Wizard for CSS easing curves.

    Resources & Links:

    In Praise of Sticky FrictionFriction Collection on SublimeWalkman.landtext-box-trim on MDNCSS Grid Lanes in Safari 26.4Easing WizardSVG RepoThe TasteCan I Use


    No-Code Supply Co. https://www.nocodesupply.co
    Corey Moen https://www.coreymoen.com
    Matthew P Munger https://www.matthewpmunger.com