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Entrepreneurs Rejoice: Witness the Glorious Dawn of the Button-Pushing Renaissance

In a groundbreaking development heralding a new era of “pressing buttons for greatness,” entrepreneurs across the globe are discovering that you don’t have to be a tech wizard or even know how to turn on your computer to build a revolutionary app. Thanks to a miraculous no-code platform, people who previously struggled with their toaster settings can now automate empires worth of sophisticated software by clicking large, friendly icons.

“Before this, I didn’t know HTML from a BLT,” admitted local visionary, Chad Imaginary, an entrepreneur with a basement startup called Appsolutely Useless, which recently generated a market valuation of aspirin wrappers and optimism. “I just clicked some buttons, and bam—an app popped out the other side!”

Industry experts are calling it the DIY app movement, where a seemingly endless array of entrepreneurs with no discernible programming skills or an ability to google a simple how-to are wielding software like they wield their remote controls—passionately but with little understanding.

A representative from the no-code platform, ClickMagically, Inc., confidently asserted, “Why waste years learning technical stuff when all your dreams can manifest through random acts of button-mashing? It’s never been easier to make an app that does something, anything, or absolutely nothing at all.”

Predictably, the tech community’s response has been mixed. “We’ve always believed in the power of tech democratization,” said Nerdulus Megabyteur, a solemn coder who reportedly cried tears of binary. “But this is like handing toddlers a chainsaw… it seems cool until you realize what’s happening in your neighborhood.”

Existing apps built with this no-code platform are said to be revolutionizing everything from banana-ripening time calculators to dating services that only match you with people named Bob. Some attempts, like the ill-fated “Find My Llama” app, flopped due to ambiguity in user expectations and frequent llama-related lawsuits.

Visionaries worldwide are now getting in on the action. Doris DeVoid, 62, who made headlines for repeatedly misspelling “Google,” is now releasing her 15th dating app called “Yenta-Stant Messaging.” When asked how she felt about entering the digital realm with no prior knowledge, she gleefully declared, “It’s like baking cookies, only messier and nobody eats them!”

For a meager $39 for life, the dream of pressing random images to create technical masterpieces can now be yours, bringing a new wave of apps to an already flooded market. Forget about quality control; the button-pushing renaissance is here, and the future is as unpredictable as the connection between your TV and streaming service right before the new season of your favorite show.

Welcome, intrepid non-techies! Take up your mice and keyboards, for the Appocalypse is nigh.