There is an uncomfortable truth in modern development: AI is illiterate in usability. For a language model or an autonomous agent, taking a thousand turns to reach a result requires no effort; it doesn't get tired, it doesn't get frustrated, and it isn't in a hurry. But your user is.
If your resources are not prepared to question the machine, you will end up delivering products that are technically flawless but humanly unbearable. And you destroy usability.
AI Has No Fatigue: An AI-generated process can be correct from a data standpoint, but a labyrinth for the user. AI does not understand the concept of "friction" because, for the AI, it doesn't exist.
The Generative Labyrinth: Without supervision, AI tends to create redundant interfaces and flows. An AI doesn't care about the long way; for a human, every extra click generates rejection.
Logical Efficiency vs. Empathy: AI proposes the most robust path for the processor, not the most intuitive one for the person. Technology must adapt to our way of thinking, not force us to think like machines.
UX as the Guardian of Sanity
At Room 714, we know that AI is a poor advisor on usability matters. That’s why our UX Designers are the key piece. They are in charge of pruning the unnecessary complexity that AI generates by inertia. They are the empathy filter that ensures the firepower of combined programming doesn't turn into "empty speed."
The human remains the key piece to ensure that the digital product is a tool for productivity and not a cognitive burden.
While others limit themselves to validating that the code "works," we validate that the flow respects the economy of human effort. Real usability is not born from AI, but from a team that knows when to stop it.
Machine usability is the opposite of human usability
AI can solve an equation in milliseconds, but it cannot feel the frustration of a misplaced button or an endless, poorly structured form. AI does not understand the emotional cognitive planes that are paramount to human beings.
Do you contradict the AI in favor of the user, or are you just blindly accepting whatever the machine proposes?
If you let AI dictate your usability, you will have a product that is efficient for servers and alienating for people.






