DEV Community

Cover image for Let's gather devs. Are we trapped inside a collective knowledge bubble?
Ryo Suwito
Ryo Suwito

Posted on

Let's gather devs. Are we trapped inside a collective knowledge bubble?

Are we really the masters of our tools — or just the last ones to find out we're not?


The Demo Is Lying to You

AI and robotics tech demos are backfiring.

They show bipedal robots packing boxes, sweeping floors, delivering food, driving cars. Jobs humans already do. Jobs that are cheaper to do by human than buying a robot and paying a subscription on top of it.

Why not demo a robot entering a nuclear facility? Swimming through a toxic chemical spill? Safely placing explosives in a minefield? That would inspire awe. That would justify the price tag. Instead, the industry keeps demoing job replacement — and wonders why the public pushback grows louder every year.


Dot-Com With a Transformer Model

Same story with LLMs, image generators, and video AI.

It's the internet boom replay. They took brick-and-mortar and moved it online. Nobody stopped to imagine entirely new categories. We wrapped AI APIs in vibe-coded React. We slapped "AI-powered" onto ERP systems.

It's pets.com with a transformer model.

The dot-com boom rewarded whoever moved beyond adding ".com" to old businesses. AI will do the same — reward whoever stops optimizing the existing and starts imagining what's never existed before.

We never thought we could rent a spare room by the night — until Airbnb. Or monetize our commute home — until Uber.

AI's "Airbnb moment" is still uncharted territory. But labs aren't exploring that space. They're burning too many billions to stop and think beyond the obvious.


The Discourse Cancels Itself

Here's the uncomfortable part: the debate around AI is also going nowhere.

Artists feel replaced. Non-designers feel freed. Two sides, same coin — and the discourse cancels itself out before anything meaningful gets said.

Meanwhile, content creators are literally paying to fight clippers — hordes downloading, cutting, and dubbing their content for free. On the other side? "I'm smarter" people burning AI credits to produce sloppy videos.

After Effects gave us the Avengers. Entire cinematic universes built from nothing. AI's big cultural flex? The Pope in a hoodie at a park.

The tool is god-tier. The imagination behind it is still stuck in the comment section.


Cavemen at the Gas Stove

Which brings us to the real problem.

Are we cavemen standing in front of a gas stove — just burning marshmallows?

The tech is capable of complex pan sears. We're not even close.

CEOs, tech leads, "digital artists," content spammers — every tier, same bubble. Nobody is exempt. We're fish trying to imagine what breathing air feels like. We can't. So we just keep swimming in circles and call it innovation.

The most dangerous thing about this moment isn't the AI. It's our collective failure of imagination.


The Clock Is Already Running

Humans are laggards by nature. We always have been.

GPT drops in 2023. Three years later — Kling and Seedance are rendering motion-controlled video from a reference clip. Mind-blowing. We all agree.

But... is that it?

We love calling ourselves masters of our tools. The hammer, the printing press, the internet. We always adapt. We always stay relevant. That's the story we tell ourselves.

But what happens to that story when AI finally hits its Uber moment? Not "AI assists humans." Not "AI augments workflow."

Just — AI.


The Question Nobody Wants to Answer

Are we the master of the tools, like we've always believed?

Or are we just the last ones to find out we're not?

The labs aren't asking this question. The money they're burning is too massive to allow for that kind of pause. The tech bros are inside their bubble. The devs are inside theirs. The artists, the executives, the creators — all of us.

The unimaginable space is still out there. Empty. Waiting.

Nobody's walked into it yet.

Top comments (0)