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The concept of OPC has been mentioned for several years, which is One Person Company.
This concept sounds wonderful: with the help of AI and automation tools, one person can accomplish what used to require a small team.
But to be honest, I used to think this was quite far from ordinary people.
Because the real problem is not whether you have ideas, but whether you can turn them into reality.
Even with AI writing code in the past, many underlying steps were unavoidable: local environment, server, domain, API, deployment, payment interface, backend logic, etc.
For tech-savvy people, these may just be steps; but for ordinary people, each step is a barrier.
So my feelings about "One Person Company" were mixed: I could see the trend and the opportunity, but since I don't know tech, it felt somewhat intangible.
Until I tried the @dappOS_com's newly beta-tested Coding feature, this thing really started to shift from concept to reality for ordinary people.
Its key aspect is not simply generating a few lines of code for you, but packaging up the intermediate process from "idea to product" as much as possible.
You only need to describe your requirements in plain language, and it connects the dots on the backend: pages, logic, deployment, payment collection, etc.
In other words, it solves not the problem of "can you write code," but the problem of "can an ordinary person independently turn an idea into a closed loop."
I conducted a small test this time using the World Cup theme.
The World Cup economy is essentially an event economy, emphasizing speed and efficiency. When a hot topic arises, you need to quickly build pages, test, and collect payments — you can't take three to five days to communicate with outsourcers.
I directly asked dappOS Coding to build a merchandise store for overseas users around the World Cup theme.
In about 10 minutes, it packaged together the front-end sales page, backend order logic, and stablecoin payment flow.
The website is here, you can click to take a look:
This case itself is not the point.
The point is that it gave me my first intuitive feeling: OPC is not just a slogan — it's that when tools compress technology, deployment, payment, and automation processes into a range that one person can handle, ordinary people truly have a chance to participate.
In the past, it was very difficult for one person to do a cross-border small business.
You might know product selection but not website building; you might know traffic but not payment; you might know trends but not be able to quickly build a product page.
In the end, many ideas are not eliminated by the market, but die on the execution threshold.
But the significance of Coding tools like dappOS lies right here.
It compresses part of the process that originally required technical staff, product staff, and operations staff to complete together into a SOP that one person can drive through natural language.
This is where I think the OPC economy is truly interesting.
Not everyone needs to become a programmer, nor can everyone immediately build a large company.
Rather, a person who doesn't understand tech can also, with the help of AI and automation tools, quickly create an idea, launch it, collect payments, and validate the market.
While others are still using AI to churn out articles and PPTs, I care more about whether such tools can help ordinary people run a real business loop.
Because for most people, the real value is not "how much code AI wrote for me," but "can AI help me open an additional source of income."
From this perspective, what dappOS Coding shows me is not just a development tool, but a signal that the era of One Person Company is truly beginning to lower the barriers.