CraftSubscribers only Jul 11, 2026 at 11:415Add to bookmarks

Gartner declared the "end of SaaS" - provocative and largely a positioning bet. But the underlying trend is real: an agent-driven world doesn't care about your UI. And the sentence "it works, don't touch it" is becoming the biggest legacy-tech liability of the decade.
Two headlines, one theme. Gartner published a note declaring the "end of SaaS" (ITmedia): the argument is that "which UI is easiest to use" as a selection criterion is dead, because increasingly no human touches the UI - an agent does. Separately, an essay circulating widely this week argues that "it works, don't touch it" is now the most dangerous sentence in tech - because legacy systems that resist modernization become the exact bottleneck agentic AI cannot bypass.
Both are the same argument told from opposite ends of the org.
Gartner's "end of SaaS" is aggressive framing but points at a real shift. The vendor pitch for the last 15 years was: cleaner UX, faster onboarding, mobile-first. If the buyer becomes an autonomous agent orchestrating tasks across a stack of tools, then:
The "don't touch it" essay is the inverse: legacy systems that were "good enough" in a human-interaction world become actively hostile in an agent-interaction world. Every undocumented workaround, every silent side-effect, every "the system won't let you do X but Sarah in Accounting knows the trick" - none of that transfers to an agent.
What "agent-ready" architecture actually requires:
For decision-makers: the "SaaS is dead" claim is exaggerated but the direction is real. Any purchase decision in 2026 should score vendors on API completeness before UI polish. For builders: refactoring for agent-readiness is the highest-leverage modernization work of the next 24 months. Legacy systems where "it works, don't touch it" prevails will be the ones that agents route around - and that's how the vendor becomes irrelevant without a single lost customer signaling it.
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Avec les agents qui gèrent tout, comment protéger nos données ?
Avec les agents, nos données seront-elles plus vulnérables ?
Avec les agents, nos données seront-elles plus vulnérables ?
Et les petites entreprises qui dépendent du SaaS, elles vont faire comment ?
Et l'impact écologique de ces technologies ? On va consommer plus d'énergie et produire plus de déchets ?
Et nous, dans tout ça ? On va encore avoir notre mot à dire ou l'IA va tout gérer toute seule ?
Comment Gartner va-t-il influencer les métiers du design ?
Ça pourrait effectivement inciter les designers à se concentrer davantage sur l'accessibilité et l'inclusivité.