They told us DevOps would set us free. That we'd deploy faster. Break silos. Move as one.
But instead, they gave us:
Velocity turned into ceremony.
We stopped building and started configuring. DevOps became a priesthood.
And the rest of us? We wait for CI/CD to bless our commits.
Qubit is not a framework.
It is not an orchestrator.
It is the spark at the edge of the machine.
A single binary.
Unlimited potential.
How many services? As many as your host can carry. No artificial limits. No subscriptions deciding your scale.
Run it in your data center.
Run it on a Raspberry Pi.
Run it at the edge, in the field, on a drone, or in your pocket.
Qubit doesn't care where it runs—only that it runs.
This isn’t a product launch.
This is a revolt.
We don’t want better tools.
We want fewer tools that do more.
We don’t want new abstractions.
We want radical clarity.
We don’t want DevOps.
We want ownership, speed, and silence between idea and execution.
We want to build like it’s day one.
We want to deploy like it’s local.
We want infra that disappears behind the code, not in front of it.
Clusters that sprawl like empires
Dev teams split in half: builders vs. maintainers
Tools that need teams to manage the tools
Vendor lock-in disguised as convenience
Infrastructure that devours the product
You should read your stack, not decode it
You should host what you build
You should sell what you’ve mastered
Infra should scale with your imagination
One host. One engine. Many services.
Your code, running, now — anywhere.
This is not just about freedom.
It’s about value.
Build a service. Publish it. Rent it.
Let your microservice earn while you sleep.
Let the code speak for you in other people's systems.
This is a new economy.
A revolt of builders, not renters.
Of rebels, not operators.
Burn your kubeconfig.
Forget your pipeline tokens.
Close the dashboards that blink more than they help.
Download Qubit.
Join the Telegram.
And ship something that makes you feel again.
→ Join the DevRevolt Telegram