Dominic Williams' vision is that users will simply describe their desired app to an AI, which then builds and deploys it on the Internet Computer, handling all underlying complexity and ensuring security.

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The barrier to creating software is collapsing. Non-coders can now build sophisticated, personalized applications for specific workflows in under an hour. This points to a future where individuals and teams create their own disposable, custom tools, replacing subscriptions to numerous niche SaaS products.

Instead of being stuck with rigid software, a future powered by decentralized AI could allow users to modify their tools directly. For example, a doctor frustrated with an electronic medical record system could use natural language to instantly change the software to fit their workflow, reclaiming control over their digital environment.

Designers who previously relied on engineers can now use AI to build complete applications, moving at the "speed of thought." This empowers creatives who understand user experience to execute their visions end-to-end, making design and UX the new competitive moats over technical implementation.

Claude Code can take a high-level goal, ask clarifying questions, and then independently work for over an hour to generate code and deploy a working website. This signals a shift from AI as a simple tool to AI as an autonomous agent capable of complex, multi-step projects.

Prototyping and even shipping complex AI applications is now possible without writing code. By combining a no-code front-end (Lovable), a workflow automation back-end (N8N), and LLM APIs, non-technical builders can create functional AI products quickly.

AI is moving beyond text generation. Using Claude's 'Artifact Builder' skill, it can create and deploy functional web applications directly in the chat window. A user can prompt it to build a tool, like a UTM link generator, and receive a usable app, not just code snippets.

A new software paradigm, "agent-native architecture," treats AI as a core component, not an add-on. This progresses in levels: the agent can do any UI action, trigger any backend code, and finally, perform any developer task like writing and deploying new code, enabling user-driven app customization.

Traditionally, building software required deep knowledge of many complex layers and team handoffs. AI agents change this paradigm. A creator can now provide a vague idea and receive a 60-70% complete, working artifact, dramatically shortening the iteration cycle from months to minutes and bypassing initial complexities.

While the internet has consolidated around major platforms, AI presents a counter-force. By drastically lowering the cost and complexity of building mobile apps, new tools could enable a 'Cambrian explosion' of personalized applications, challenging the one-size-fits-all model.

Traditionally, developers choose the tech stack. With self-writing platforms, business owners describe needs directly to an AI. Their criteria become security and reliability, not developer familiarity, dissolving the network effects that protect incumbent platforms.

AI as a 'Wish Machine' Will Create Apps on a Secure, Self-Writing Cloud | RiffOn