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David Heinemeier Hansson

Dell is on a roll with the XPS The will to power will return But Y European Delusions & Danish Drones The Rape of Britain A pond of interesting problems Let the agents democratize open source Basecamp Five Celebrating computers at Omacon Panther Lake is the real deal Basecamp becomes agent accessible Denmark desperately needs more inequality ONCE (Again) Omacon comes to New York Clankers with claws Cloud gaming is kinda amazing Promoting AI agents The O'Saasy License Europe is weak and delusional (but not doomed) Fizzy is our fun, modern take on Kanban (and we made it open source!) Six billion reasons to cheer for Shopify Local LLMs are how nerds now justify a big computer they don't need No backup, no cry Sabbaticals keep our attrition at bay Success always spawns haters A petabyte worth of Omarchy in a month Give me AI slop over human sludge any day Pay yourself first We've all had enough of this nonsense Calling someone a "nazi" is a permission slip for violence The great falls of Boeing, Intel, and Apple As I remember London Apple has no one left who can say no Words are not violence Thrice charmed at Rails World Engineering excellence starts on edge
The malleable computer
David Heinem · 2026-04-15 · via David Heinemeier Hansson

David Heinemeier Hansson

April 15, 2026

Open source promised that users would be free to change whatever code they were running. The reality, however, is that hardly any of them ever did — it was simply too hard. Now, with AI, it suddenly isn't.

This is very exciting. Being able to add features to any local open-source application and then use that bespoke fork for your own benefit is an incredible step toward the original open source promise.

This isn't just about regular users, either. Even if you are a programmer, you might not be familiar with the language the application is written in. And even if you are, taking the time to get familiar with any substantial codebase is a tall order. AI is compressing that complexity and making it malleable at a ferocious rate.

What excites me even more, though, is when this power is applied to the operating system, and thus the entire computer. When you're able to change not just individual applications, but your system's menu bars, your window manager, your notification system, your everything. 

But you can only do this on Linux. With Windows and macOS, the core elements of the operating system are owned by the companies that make them. While it's often possible to hack certain aspects, it's far from truly having the malleable computer that Linux allows.

I've already seen this a lot in the Omarchy world: users who aren't super technical making the system their own with the help of AI and being utterly delighted by the outcome.

And while this is still a pretty nerdy thing to do, I don't think it will remain contained to that niche for long. As models get even more powerful, the idea that your system is tied down as a fixed black box is likely to become an archaic notion pretty quickly.

As always, the future is already here, it's just not evenly distributed.

About David Heinemeier Hansson