George Railean - UX/UI Designer

George Railean - UX/UI Designer

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05/19/2026

This is the AI dashboard we designed for Control AI Policy Platform, an AI system for navigating U.S. government policy. The interface maps laws, federal agencies, regulations, and compliance gaps as an interactive node graph. At the center sits the Constitution. Around it, every law and policy connects through dependency and urgency lines that shift in real time. Dark interface, dense data visualization, motion-driven transitions. Built for policy analysts who currently navigate this work through PDFs and spreadsheets.

We have a theory about design.
The more complex the data, the more courageous the interface needs to be. Not simpler. More courageous. Willing to visualize complexity instead of hiding it.

Control AI Policy Platform was the moment we put that theory to the test.
Imagine a constitution at the center of a universe. Around it, laws, entities, services, regulations, compliance gaps, all connected by luminous lines that branch, intersect, and pulse according to relevance and urgency. Every node has an identity. Every connection, a meaning.

This isn't a visual metaphor. It's information architecture, the purest thing UI/UX design can do.
What truly fascinated us about this project was that every design decision had real consequences. How you position one node relative to another dictates how an analyst understands the relationship between two laws. How you encode color determines whether a critical alert is noticed in time or overlooked entirely. How you animate the transition between an overview and the detail of a federal decree decides whether the user feels oriented or lost.

UI/UX design is not about how things look.
It's about how the mind works when it comes into contact with them.
This project was the best reminder of that.

04/07/2026

I didn’t want this to feel like a dashboard.
I wanted it to feel like you’re watching a system think.
In this exploration, I focused on how cyber activity could be experienced, not just displayed. The idea was to take something invisible - traffic, threats, anomalies - and give it presence, rhythm, and flow.
The globe became my starting point. Not as decoration, but as context. Everything connects to it, moves around it, reacts through it. You don’t read the system - you follow it.
Motion does most of the work here. It shows where things start, how they evolve, and where they’re heading. It keeps you oriented without forcing you to think about it.
Instead of jumping between views, everything unfolds in place.
Instead of searching for signals, they surface when they matter.
I tried to design something that feels fast, but not overwhelming.
Complex, but still clear.
Something that helps you understand what’s happening, the moment it starts happening.

03/24/2026

I constantly explore new ways to transform data into experiences that feel natural and meaningful.

For me, design is not just about interfaces - it’s about how information comes to life, gains meaning, and becomes clear, intuitive, and easy to understand within increasingly complex contexts.

From intelligent dashboards to conversational interactions and connected digital ecosystems, I create products that not only look good, but also provide clarity, context, and speed in decision-making.

I aim to reduce noise, simplify complexity, and build experiences where users don’t have to learn the system - the system adapts to them.

Each project is a step toward a future where interacting with information becomes more natural, faster, and more intelligent.

03/10/2026

I enjoy designing interfaces for systems that operate at a global scale.

In this concept, I explored how complex satellite infrastructure and network monitoring can be transformed into a clear, actionable control experience. The challenge was not simply displaying telemetry, but structuring large volumes of real-time data into dashboards that support fast and confident decision-making.

The interface brings together multiple layers of operational insight: satellite telemetry, ground station performance, network load across towers, and predictive risk indicators such as collision alerts and probability of failure. Instead of overwhelming operators with fragmented data streams, the system organizes information through visual hierarchy, dynamic charts, and contextual panels that make anomalies and dependencies immediately visible.

Data visualization plays a central role. Real-time graphs reveal system behavior patterns, interactive dashboards provide operational status at a glance, and spatial context allows users to understand how infrastructure behaves across locations and time.

The goal was to create a system where complexity feels manageable, where operators can move from observation to decision without friction.

Because when infrastructure spans continents and orbit, clarity is not a design preference.
It is an operational requirement.

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