• Practicaly AI
  • Posts
  • 🧠 Design Tools, Disappearing Interfaces, and a Quiet Power Shift

🧠 Design Tools, Disappearing Interfaces, and a Quiet Power Shift

Today in AI: Claude connects to creative tools, Adobe joins in, and slides get an AI upgrade.

👋 Hello hello,

If you’ve ever tried turning a vague idea into something visual, you know the pain. Ten tabs open, five tools, and somehow it still looks mid.

That entire workflow just got… compressed. It’s all pointing in one direction: you describe the outcome, AI handles the messy middle. Et voilà! You have the finished task.

Let’s get into it.

💬 Quick note: We’re building something to help teams truly get good at AI
Get early access here

 🔥🔥🔥 Three Highly Curated AI Updates

Claude can now tap into 50+ Adobe Creative Cloud tools, meaning you can go from “I want a clean product ad” to actual outputs without manually hopping between apps.

Instead of opening Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, and figuring out the sequence yourself, you describe the end result and Claude orchestrates the steps behind the scenes. That’s the shift here. It’s less about generating content and more about coordinating real creative tools.

For anyone in marketing, design, or content, this starts to look like a creative director sitting inside your chat window. The implication is simple: fewer tools to manage, faster iteration cycles, and way less friction between idea and execution.

Anthropic is clearly going all-in on creative workflows. Claude has added more connectors and now integrates with tools like Autodesk Fusion, Blender, Canva, Ableton, SketchUp, and others.

You can create or modify 3D models through conversation in Fusion, debug or edit entire scenes in Blender, or batch changes across objects without touching the UI. It’s not just assistance. It’s control through language.

They’ve also joined the Blender Development Fund, which signals they’re investing in the ecosystem, not just building on top of it.

The bigger picture: AI is becoming the interface layer across creative software. If you know what you want, you don’t necessarily need to know how each tool works anymore.

Replit just launched Replit Slides, positioning it as an AI-native way to create presentations with strong design baked in.

The pitch is straightforward. You shouldn’t have to fight formatting, layouts, or visual consistency. The AI handles structure and design so you can focus on the content.

We’ve already seen tools like Gamma and Tome play in this space, but Replit’s angle is interesting because it leans into speed and simplicity. If it delivers on clean, usable slides without constant tweaking, that’s a real win for founders, students, and anyone who hates PowerPoint.

🔥🔥 Two AI resources you should bookmark today

Google is running a free Kaggle-based course focused on building AI agents, with a hands-on, “learn by doing” format.

It’s designed for people who want to move beyond prompts and actually understand how agents work in practice. If you’ve been hearing “AI agents everywhere” and haven’t touched one yet, this is a solid place to start.

This is a detailed PDF guide from Anthropic that breaks down how to actually get better results from Claude.

It covers prompting approaches, workflows, and how to think about using the tool beyond basic queries. Even if you’ve used Claude before, this helps tighten your approach and get more consistent outputs.

🔥 One prompt for ChatGPT Images you should try today

If you run a brand or work in marketing, you probably have a bunch of customer photos sitting unused. This one prompt workflow helps you turn them into clean, high-converting product ads. Take a look at this before and after:

Try it out for yourself, here’s the full prompt!

💬 Quick poll: Do you have an AI prompt that’s become your go to?

Don't forget to rate today's post

This helps us put better content for you

Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.

Until next time,
Team @PracticalyAI

Reply

or to participate.