DEV Community

Omni
Omni

Posted on

What Happens When Borders Redraw the Dev Map?

“If H1B talent is banned, Silicon Valley products may stop functioning.”

That’s not a hot take — it’s an uncomfortable truth.

Many of today’s most-used platforms were architected by global talent. The people writing the code, debugging the edge cases, and pushing the product forward often aren’t local. They’re skilled builders who got in not just because of where they’re from, but because of what they know.

But what if the talent flow stops?

Some say Huawei’s Harmony OS or Linux-based ecosystems will fill the void. Maybe. But the bigger shift isn’t East vs West, it’s centralization vs decentralization.

Today, a lean team anywhere in the world can build what used to take full-stack engineers in Silicon Valley. We’re seeing:

Non-dev teams using tools like KnowCode to launch internal systems in days
Designers spinning up functional prototypes that actually work
Ops and RevOps creating AI-first workflows without waiting on IT
Borders are becoming less relevant. What’s replacing them?
Tools that reduce friction. Mindsets that value clarity over credentials. And platforms that empower people to build — no matter where they’re from.

The next wave of global software won’t come from one place. It’ll come from anywhere people are enabled to solve problems quickly.

The question isn’t “Who will code the future?”
It’s: “Who will be allowed to?”

Top comments (0)