惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

B
Blog
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
V
V2EX
博客园 - 叶小钗
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Latest news
Latest news
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
美团技术团队
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
T
Threatpost
Y
Y Combinator Blog
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
A
Arctic Wolf
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
小众软件
小众软件
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
T
Tenable Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
D
Docker
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
量子位
A
About on SuperTechFans
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
雷峰网
雷峰网
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
P
Proofpoint News Feed
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
F
Full Disclosure
The Cloudflare Blog
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
O
OpenAI News
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
IT之家
IT之家
S
Secure Thoughts
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
博客园 - 司徒正美
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News

DEV Community

Authentication Security Deep Dive: From Brute Force to Salted Hashing (With Java Examples) Why AI Systems Don’t Fail — They Drift Spilling beans for how i learn for exam😁"Reinforcement Learning Cheat Sheet" I Replaced Chrome with Safari for AI Browser Automation. Here's What Broke (and What Finally Worked) How Python Borrows Other People's Work The $40 Architecture: Processing 1 Billion API Requests with 99.99% Uptime Vibe Coding: A Workflow Guide (From Zero to SaaS) Most webhook security guides protect the wrong side. The scary part is delivery. Headless CMS for TanStack Start: Build a Blog with Cosmic EU Age Verification App "Hacked in 2 Minutes" — What Actually Happened Comfy Cloud’s delete function does not actually remove files Running AI Models on GPU Cloud Servers: A Beginner Guide Event-driven media intelligence with AWS Step Functions and Bedrock I scored 500 AI prompts across 8 quality dimensions — here's what broke How to Call Google Gemini API from Next.js (Free Tier, No Backend Needed) The Portal Protocol: Reclaiming Human Connection in the Age of AI How to Fix Your Team's Scattered Knowledge Problem With a Self-Hosted Forum Intro to tc Cloud Functors: A Graph-First Mental Model for the Modern Cloud Designing Multi-Tenant Backends With Both Ownership and Team Access I Built a Neumorphic CSS Library with 77+ Components — Here's What I Learned PostgreSQL Performance Optimization: Why Connection Pooling Is Critical at Scale Cómo construí un SaaS multi-rubro para gestionar expensas en Argentina con FastAPI + Vue 3 🚀 I Built an Ethical Hacking Scanner Tool – Open Source Project I Replaced /usage and /context in Claude Code With a Single Statusline A Pythonic Way to Handle Emails (IMAP/SMTP) with Auto-Discovery and AI-Ready Design I Collected 8.9 Million Polymarket Price Points — Here's What I Found About How Markets Really Move EcoTrack AI — Carbon Footprint Tracker & Dashboard Everyone's Using AI. No One Agrees How. 5 self-hosted ebook managers worth trying in 2026 Building Your First AI Agent with LangChain: From Chatbot to Autonomous Assistant Common SOC 2 Failures (Real World) Stop Vibe-Checking Your AI App: A Practical Guide to Evals How to Use SonarQube and SonarScanner Locally to Level Up Your Code Quality Your Next To-Do App Is Dead — I Replaced Mine with an OpenClaw AI Sign a Nostr event in 60 lines of Python using coincurve — no nostr-sdk, no nbxplorer, no rust toolchain ITGC Audit Explained Like You’re in Big 4 Patch Tuesday abril 2026: Microsoft parcha 163 vulnerabilidades y un zero-day en SharePoint Stop scraping everything: a better way to track competitor price changes Listing on MCPize + the Official MCP Registry while routing payments OUTSIDE the marketplace — how I kept 100% of my x402 revenue Building an AI-Powered Risk Intelligence System Using Serverless Architecture Why We Ripped Function Overloading Out of Our AI Toolchain Testing AI-Generated Code: How to Actually Know If It Works SaaS Churn Is Killing Your Business. Here Is What to Do About It (Without a Support Team) The Speed of AI Is No Longer Linear - And Self-Improving Models Are Why How to Implement RBAC for MCP Tools: A Practical Guide for Engineering Teams From Standard Quote to Persuasive Proposal: AI Automation for Arborists I built a CLI that scaffolds complete multi-tenant SaaS apps Axios CVE-2025–62718: The Silent SSRF Bug That Could Be Hiding in Your Node.js App Right Now The dashboard that ended our friendship Data Pipelines Explained Simply (and How to Build Them with Python) The Hidden Cost of AI Systems Nobody Talks About. undefined vs undeclared, and how typeof behaves Switching from file-based jobs to NATS/Kafka in Rust without changing code io_uring Adventures: Rust Servers That Love Syscalls Why Agentic AI is Killing the Traditional Database The POUR principles of web accessibility for developers and designers Quantum Neural Network 3D — A Deep Dive into Interactive WebGL Visualization How To Install Caveman In Codex On macOS And Windows Automation Pipeline Reliability: Why Your Workflow Breaks When Nobody Is Watching I Built an 'Open World' AI Coding Agent — It Works From ANY Folder From Freelancing to Product: A Tech Service Company's SaaS Transformation China's AI Giants: Adding Tencent Hunyuan & ByteDance Doubao to AI University (74 Providers) On the Vibe Coders and Their Lies clerk: Auto-Summarize Your Claude Code Sessions AI Weekly — 2026/04/10–04/17 | The Model Lockdown Is Here, but the Toolchain Is the Real Battleground AI 週報 — 2026/04/10–2026/04/17 模型封鎖潮來了,但工具鏈才是真戰場 Maybe this is how Open-Source apps are born... 🚀 Fine-Tune LLMs with LoRA and QLoRA: 2026 Guide tRPC v11 + Next.js App Router: End-to-End Type Safety Without the Boilerplate ShadCN UI in 2026: Why I Stopped Installing Component Libraries and Started Owning My Components SaaS Billing in React Server Components: Stripe + Supabase Without a Single `useEffect` Join our DEV Weekend Challenge — $1,000 in Prizes Across TEN winners! Submissions Due April 20 at 6:59 AM UTC. Implementing FSRS Spaced Repetition in Flutter + Supabase — Adding Memory Science to an AI Learning App "I Texted My Localhost From the Train — Claude Code Fixed the Bug Before I Got Home" I Built a Sales Prep AI and It Went Deeper Than Expected Design to Code #2: One JSON, Eleven Outputs Solving the 100M-Row Problem: A Summary Table Pattern for High-Volume Push Notification Logs Flutter Web With Wasm: What Actually Changes For Developers I Built 50 Royalty-Free Soundtracks for My Side Project in a Weekend Using AI Music Generation The Vibe Coding Security Checklist: 7 Things to Check Before You Ship Stop Letting Googlebot Guess Fix Your React App's SEO Right Desconstruindo o Streaming do LinkedIn: Como Criar um Engine de Extração de Vídeo de Alta Performance com HLS e FFmpeg (EDA Part-1) EDA (Exploratory Data Analysis) Explained With Real Life — Why Looking at Your Data Is the Most Important Step in Machine Learning Brand Relationship Management at Scale: Our 4-Touch Outreach System for 200+ Brands Why String.fromEnvironment() Might Return an Empty String in Dart JGuardrails 1.0.0 — Hardening Java LLM Apps Against Jailbreaks, Toxicity, and Prompt Injection Plan and Schedule a Full Week of Threads Content From One Claude Conversation Coding Cat Oran Ep3, Five Tables Changed Everything Updated: BFF Pattern I'm done watching freelancers get buried by 200 proposals. So I'm building the alternative. This is my first post BFS Algorithm in Java Step by Step Tutorial with Examples Tracking LLM Pricing Monthly: An Open Dataset for 22 AI Models How We Measure Content ROI on a Comparison Site: Revenue Attribution Without Perfect Data Introducing Nova AI Ops: The AI-Native Operating System for SRE Teams I built a free desktop video downloader for Windows — Grabbit How Talkie OCR Helps Vision-Impaired & Dyslexic Users Read the World Around Them VRCFaceTracking安装和iPhone面捕配置教程,有bug Even CrowdStrike Can't See Your Agents The Automation Gold Rush: What n8n Workflows and Claude Are Opening Up for Developers Right Now
The Best Technology Disappears
Josh Adler · 2026-05-31 · via DEV Community

Your keyboard app is the most important app on your phone and you have never once thought about it. You don't know what version it's on. You've never read its changelog. You couldn't name a single feature it shipped in the last year. It just works, and that's the whole point, and also that's the highest bar any piece of technology can clear.

The technologies that actually changed how people live all share one trait: they disappeared. Not failed, not faded. They got so good at solving their problem that users stopped noticing them entirely.

The progression every technology follows

Every category that truly won followed the same four-stage path.

Visible. You notice it. You learn it. You fight with it. Early GPS was like this. Staring at the screen, second-guessing routes, squinting at maps.

Useful. You start relying on it but you're still aware. You trust the GPS but you glance at the route before driving.

Habitual. You stop questioning it. You follow the blue line without thinking. You click the first Google result without scanning alternatives.

Invisible. You stop experiencing the technology entirely. You experience the outcome. Not GPS but the turn. Not Google but the answer. Not autocorrect but a correct text message.

That last step is where the value is. Google didn't become a $1.7 trillion company because it had a clean UI. It got there because the first result was usually right, which meant you never thought about search. You typed, got your answer, moved on. The entire valuation traces back to the experience of not thinking about Google while using Google.

Why most products never get there

Most products don't even try to disappear. They actively resist it. Every notification is the system saying "remember me." Every loading screen, onboarding tooltip, rating prompt, and "what's new" modal is the product waving its hand at you when the ideal outcome would be you forgetting it exists.

Every one of those moments is a design failure. Not a marketing opportunity. A failure. Because in that instant the user became conscious they're using a tool instead of just doing the thing they wanted to do.

Disappearing requires solving every edge case. Not most, all. One bad autocorrect pulls you out. One wrong reroute makes you aware of satellites. One buffering spinner breaks the spell. The tech has to be right every time or close enough that the misses feel like flukes. That is an absurdly high bar, which is why the products that clear it tend to be worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

As a builder, this changes how you think

The key insight for anyone shipping product: invisibility is not polish. It's not a thing you add after engineering is done. It's the design philosophy from the first commit.

You have to architect for disappearance. You have to solve the problem so completely that there's nothing left for the user to think about. TikTok's recommendation engine is one of the most sophisticated ML systems in production anywhere, transformer models, reinforcement learning, multi-armed bandits, and they never show you any of it. Because showing it would break the experience. The magic requires the magician to vanish.

If you're building developer tools, this applies directly. The best CLI is the one nobody notices running. The best CI pipeline is the one developers forget exists because it just catches things. The best monitoring is the alert you never see because the system healed itself. The best linter is the one that fixed the problem before you knew there was a problem.

Think about git for a second. You probably use it fifty times a day and never think about distributed hash graphs or Merkle trees or content-addressable storage. It disappeared. The technology is invisible and all you experience is: my code is saved, my changes are tracked, I can go back if something breaks. That's the invisible stack doing its job.

AI hasn't disappeared yet, and that's the gap

Every AI product right now is stuck firmly in the "visible" stage. Chatbots. Prompts. Copy-paste workflows. Context windows you manage manually. System prompts you write and rewrite. Every interaction announces: you are using AI.

Some are approaching useful. A few are getting habitual. None have vanished. And the reason is telling. Most AI tools are built around the chat interface, which is the technology making itself visible by design. The prompt box is a loading screen. The conversation thread is a changelog you didn't ask for. Every "how can I help you" is the system reminding you it exists.

This is what drives the work at TrueMemory. The question isn't "how do we build a better memory tool" but "how do we build a memory system the user forgets about." The architecture follows biological memory patterns: an encoding gate that filters before storage, automatic novelty and salience scoring, natural decay that keeps things manageable. The full system is detailed in the research paper but honestly the thesis is one sentence: if you notice the memory system, it failed.

Every feature gets one test. Does this make the system more visible or less? If the user has to remember to save something, the design isn't done. If they have to open an app to store context that should have been captured automatically, the design isn't done. Every manual step is the technology announcing itself.

The trajectory is the same one GPS and search and autocorrect followed. The first personal AI system that crosses from habitual to invisible wins everything.

That's the only step that matters.


Josh Adler is a researcher at TrueMemory, a Sauron company. Research: arXiv:2605.04897. More at joshadler.com.