Currently, enormous resources are dispersed across duplicative efforts, countless web frameworks, authentication systems, and database solutions that largely solve identical problems. This fragmentation creates unnecessary complexity, increases maintenance overhead, and forces developers to repeatedly learn marginally different approaches to the same challenges.
A coordinated effort to establish a "universal stack", built on open-source principles and maintained collaboratively, could dramatically accelerate technological progress whilst reducing barriers to entry for new developers and organisations. By converging on proven, standardised solutions for core infrastructure components, the community could focus innovation on genuinely novel problems rather than reinventing established patterns.
This approach would not only benefit humanity through more robust, well-tested infrastructure, but could also disrupt rent-seeking business models that profit from artificial scarcity and vendor lock-in. When fundamental computing resources become freely available and universally accessible, it democratises innovation and enables more equitable participation in the digital economy.
The question isn't whether such consolidation is technically feasible, successful precedents like Linux and the web standards demonstrate it is. The question is whether the developer community can align around shared priorities that transcend individual commercial interests.