zerotehingutasu
Zerotehingotasu is a neologism that appears in discussions of design, automation, and systems engineering to denote a principle of minimizing friction in processes so that many tasks occur with little to no explicit user input. The term is used across communities that emphasize seamless interaction, rapid provisioning, and efficient data flows. Variants of the spelling and transliteration, such as zerotehingotasū or zerotechingutasu, are also encountered in online glossaries and informal literature.
Etymology and scope of meaning are informal and not standardized. The word combines English “zero” with a
- In software design, zerotehingotasu is invoked to describe interfaces and workflows that require minimal clicks, taps,
- In operations and IT, it supports zero-touch provisioning, automated configuration, and self-healing systems that recover without
- In data engineering, it refers to zero-touch data ingestion and transformation pipelines that require little manual
Critics warn that overemphasizing zero-interaction can obscure important user choices, reduce transparency, or raise privacy concerns
See also: frictionless design, zero-touch provisioning, automation, user experience.