Wondering what impressive small features people have seen around, this can be for instance a text/hover effect, something being nicely interactive, etc, very small UX/UI improvements that make a big difference.
I love 1password's "Show in Large Type" feature, which shows your password in a large monospace font with symbols and numbers clearly differentiated. Makes it super easy to see and type on another device (like when you have it open on your phone and use it to log in on another computer). <a href="https://blog.1password.com/posts/2018/b5x1.10/large-type.png" rel="nofollow">https://blog.1password.com/posts/2018/b5x1.10/large-type.png</a><p>Small touches like that are awesome, and why I'm happy to pay for 1password over the OS or browser password managers or competitors like Bitwarden.<p>-----<p>For my company's support team, they often had to reset customer passwords over the phone (I know, how archaic). I copied that 1password look and then added the NATO phonetic alphabet below each letter / number so they can easily read the entire password out loud (like "whiskey tango foxtrot delta zero zero delta"). Last I heard, that one tiny tweak (which took twenty minutes to add) ended up saving them hours on the phone each day just by preventing a bunch of misspoken/misheard passwords.
As someone who enjoys RPG games with a lot of collectibles, Terraria’s “Quick stack to nearby chests” comes to mind. For those who haven’t played Terraria, here’s how this works: you stand in your base next to chests you’ve stored your loot in, click a button in your inventory window, and any items in your inventory which already exist in nearby chests get automatically sent to the appropriate chest. It’s a small feature, but huge in terms of QoL/time savings, especially if you’re like me and hoard everything you find
I think a couple more have caught on, but Netflix was one of the first I think to let you press a button to finish your email login for popular email providers. So you could press the "@gmail.com" button instead of typing it all out. Doesn't really matter on a computer, but was nice when signing in on a TV.