An AI-driven revolution in mass development is quietly taking off. Latest data shows that over 500,000 AI-generated commercial applications have been successfully launched, covering more than 200 niche fields such as education, culture and tourism, energy, and entertainment, with cumulative service users exceeding 10 million and creating economic and efficiency value of over 5 billion yuan. The core driver of this wave is a low-barrier AI development platform called "Miaoda" — it makes the creation of applications with "no code, no cost, no deployment" a reality.

At the 2025 Miaoda Creator Conference, "wild developers" from various industries became the stars. They are not programmers, but they used AI to create smart tools that changed their work and lives:

- The team from Rongtang Ancient Village in Haikou used AI to build a "Digital Museum," allowing visitors to scan codes for an immersive tour, solving the problem of lack of interpretation resources in ancient villages and boosting local cultural tourism consumption;

- Wang Zhilei, a petroleum engineer with 12 years of experience, developed an "Intelligent Oil and Gas Well Design System" based on the Miaoda platform, compressing complex solutions that previously took days into just a few minutes, which has been widely used among peers;

- Deng Kaikai, the owner of a music store, created the "Kuatai AI Novel Generation Tool," helping ordinary users to instantly create online novels, even achieving stable income.

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The magic of Miaoda lies in its "intention equals application" minimal logic. Users only need to describe their needs in natural language — such as "Create an app that automatically explains ancient buildings based on tourist location" — the platform can then automatically generate a complete application including front-end interface, back-end logic, and data management, and supports one-click publishing to multiple platforms such as web, iOS, and Android. No lines of code are needed throughout the process, completely breaking down technical barriers.

This is not only an improvement in efficiency, but also the liberation of creativity. When the development threshold drops from "mastering programming languages" to "clearly expressing ideas," the creative potential of millions of ordinary people is instantly activated. AI is no longer a patent of a few tech companies, but rather a "digital hammer" in the hands of teachers, guides, small shop owners, and engineers, used to create their own intelligent solutions.

As these AI-native development platforms become widespread, the power structure of the software industry is being restructured: in the future, the application ecosystem may no longer be dominated by big companies, but instead driven by countless small and real "life problems." In the new era opened up by Miaoda, anyone with an idea could potentially become the creator of the next million-level AI application — and this transformation has only just begun.