Three months ago, a group of practitioners published a quiet result that, in hindsight, marks a real inflection point on why minimalism is out and considered maximalism is in.
What's changing
Three quiet trends are converging: cheaper compute, better tooling, and a new generation of operators who grew up with these tools as defaults. Each was a slow burn on its own. Together they compound, and that compounding is what most quarterly forecasts will miss.
Why it matters
Three quiet trends are converging: cheaper compute, better tooling, and a new generation of operators who grew up with these tools as defaults. Each was a slow burn on its own. Together they compound, and that compounding is what most quarterly forecasts will miss.
What to do about it
If you talk to the practitioners actually shipping in this space, they sound notably less excited and notably more confident than the hype cycle suggests. That contrast — quieter, more grounded enthusiasm — is usually the signal you want.
- Adopt early — the cost of waiting is higher than the cost of failing fast.
- Measure honestly — pick two metrics, ignore the rest for the first month.
- Talk to users — the gap between assumption and reality is wider than ever.
The takeaway
Don't rebuild your strategy around a single data point. Do update your priors. The cost of a small adjustment now is far less than a full pivot in six months.


