Why the Next Big Thing in Tech Isn’t an App — It’s a Physical System A developer argues that the next big innovation in tech is not software but physical systems integrating AI and IoT, such as hospitals predicting equipment needs, factories preventing machine failures, and logistics networks optimizing in real time. The post highlights Aperture Venture Studio as an example of a company building end-to-end intelligent systems for real-world operations. We’ve been conditioned to think innovation = software. A new SaaS tool. Another mobile app. Another dashboard. But the most interesting things happening in tech right now are happening in the physical world in warehouses, hospitals, construction sites, and factories. Here’s what’s shifting: Connected devices are no longer enough. Having sensors that collect data is table stakes. The real value now is in what you do with that data in real time — automatically, intelligently, at scale. That’s the difference between IoT and AIoT AI + IoT . Think: •A hospital that doesn’t just track equipment — it predicts where it’ll be needed next •A factory floor that doesn’t just monitor machines — it decides when to intervene before failure •A logistics network that doesn’t just log movement — it optimizes it live This is what “intelligent systems for real-world operations” actually means. Not a pitch, a working system. The venture studios and companies building in this space are doing something most tech builders ignore: they’re solving large, boring, industrial problems that have existed for decades, with tools that finally make the solutions viable. If you’re a developer wondering where to point your skills next; physical AI, edge computing, and IoT data pipelines are where meaningful problems still live. Curious about what this looks like as a venture-building model? Look up Aperture Venture Studio — they’re one of the few doing this end-to-end. Drop your thoughts below are you building anything in the physical AI space?