Why This World Shouldn't Have Been Introduced with Coding (And How It Ruined Everything)
Why This World Shouldn't Have Been Introduced with Coding (And How It Ruined Everything)

Why This World Shouldn't Have Been Introduced with Coding (And How It Ruined Everything)

Ah, coding — the art of turning coffee into bugs and sleepless nights into magical digital experiences. The same world that once enjoyed simpler days, where the biggest technological headache was rewinding cassette tapes or fixing a flickering tube light.

If only humanity had minded its own business, we would still be living in a peaceful world without apps constantly reminding you to drink water or smart fridges judging your midnight snacking habits. A world where the only "cache" people worried about was the hidden stash of biscuits under their grandma's bed.

The Utopia Before Coding

Picture this — a world without coding. No smartphones. No social media. No Netflix autoplay asking you for the tenth time if you're still watching (of course, I am — stop judging me!).

People would wake up to the sound of real birds, not the default alarm sound that has been mentally torturing humanity since Nokia's prime days. Conversations would be face-to-face, with real eye contact — not just a few emoji reactions on Instagram stories. The biggest controversy in life would be whose turn it is to clean the dishes, not whether the latest iOS update slowed down your phone on purpose.

Kids would play outside, running, jumping, scraping their knees — not staring into a screen trying to figure out if they just went viral for the latest 7-second dance challenge.

The most complicated device in the house would be the remote control — and even that wouldn't come with an instruction manual thicker than a dictionary.

Then Came Coding — And Everything Went Downhill

It all started with good intentions — automating boring tasks, making life easier, and maybe showing off a little bit with a blinking "Hello, World!" on a screen.

Little did we know, we were summoning the digital apocalypse.

Now, you can't even make toast without connecting your smart toaster to Wi-Fi — because, obviously, your bread needs cloud storage. Your vacuum cleaner sends you notifications when it's done cleaning — because nothing says progress like a machine demanding a five-star rating.

People used to write love letters — long, heartfelt letters sealed with a kiss. Now they write JSON objects and hope the API responds with { "status": "success" }. Instead of debating the meaning of life, we're debating whether tabs or spaces make us better people.

And don't even get me started on CAPTCHA. What kind of sick mind thought it would be fun to make people prove they're not robots by identifying blurry traffic lights at 3 AM?

The Modern Nightmare

Coding gave birth to social media algorithms that know you're planning a trip to Bali before you even tell your friends. It created subscription services for things nobody asked for — like cloud storage for your cat's photos.

Thanks to coding, we live in a world where a fridge can refuse to dispense water until you update its firmware — and it will definitely send you a passive-aggressive notification reminding you that your vegetable drawer hasn't been opened in three days.

You can't even watch a YouTube video in peace without five unskippable ads and a recommendation algorithm that insists you're deeply interested in how pencils are manufactured. Websites crash for no reason. Apps freeze the exact moment you're about to pay for something. And let's not forget the sacred ritual of clearing cache — the modern version of sacrificing a goat to appease the gods of technology.

Passwords? Oh, please. Before coding, the only password anyone needed was "Open Sesame." Now, you need a minimum of 12 characters, one uppercase letter, one symbol, your firstborn child's name, and the blood of a unicorn — and somehow, you'll still forget it by tomorrow.

And the Job Market? Absolute Circus.

Once upon a time, getting a job meant showing up, shaking hands, and proving you could hammer a nail or count some money. Now? You need to know React, TypeScript, Python, and 37 other technologies just to apply for a job that requires uploading images to a website.

Not to mention the job descriptions — "Junior Developer with 10+ years of experience in AI and Machine Learning." Oh, sure, let me just time travel real quick.

But... You're Welcome, I Guess?

Alright, sarcasm aside — maybe, just maybe, the world is a little better with coding. Sure, we've traded privacy for convenience, but we've also built things that connect, create, and empower. Coding has given us video calls with loved ones across the globe, life-saving medical software, and the sheer miracle of cat videos.

Would life be simpler without coding? Absolutely. Would it be better? Well... how would you order midnight pizza without a food delivery app? How would you stalk your ex's new relationship without social media? How would you binge-watch five seasons of a show in one weekend without Netflix asking if you're okay?

The world without coding would have been simpler, but let's be honest — would you really want to live in a world without memes, Netflix, or one-click pizza delivery?

Yeah... I didn't think so.


What do you think? Did coding really ruin the world or make it better? Drop your thoughts below — but only if your internet connection is stable enough, of course. And don't forget to clear your cache before commenting — just in case.

yes coding is a blessing... because it is a profession and field of study... but was it what the early creators of the computer envisioned that technology would bring? I would imagine they had much nobler dreams☺️

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