
At least at the scale we are seeing it happening now. Start with principles to design for the unknownĭesigning for AI first of all is an interesting challenge as it is a relatively new space. Talking about the value of prototyping: With their help we could quickly dig deeper on questions like: What can AI feel like in Miro as a digital whiteboard, what are the unknowns, which ideas could be brought further? And most importantly: How can a tech demo be transformed into a real user value that has the chance of defining how people work in Miro long term, instead of just feeling like a gimmick they play around with once? When the larger design team was brought in we could already benefit from the engineering team having explored a wide range of ideas to play around with. Work on Miro AI started a few weeks back. How can a tech demo be transformed into a real user value that has the chance of defining how people work in Miro long term, instead of just feeling like a gimmick they play around with once?
#Miro board professional
With many tools out there striving for conversational UI as a way to engage with artificial intelligence we wondered how AI could support something as visual as co-creation on a whiteboard – and what value this technology provides to users collaborating in the professional enterprise space. Naturally, Miro started to look at this as an opportunity space as well. Recently the discussion in tech and product was dominated by AI. I am happy to share some of the work and thoughts here on LinkedIn. Today is a big day for Miro and I am happy to share what the team has worked on in the last two month – Miro AI.
