Logic gates are the most successful abstraction ever invented. They run your phone, your car, your cloud, your AI models.
And.. almost nobody thinks about them anymore.
We celebrate frameworks, languages, architectures but every modern stack still collapses into:
TRUE,
FALSE, and
how they combine.
I found this image funny because it reminded me of logic gates and that progress didn't replace logic. It just buried it under better naming.
I reality, when an abstraction survives this long, the next big change rarely comes from improving it. It comes from questioning whether it should exist in its current form at all.
Because there's
an entire field betting that the next leap won't come from faster gates, but from breaking the idea that logic must be binary! Some people are already working on that.
That kind of shift never starts at the surface. It starts with people who still understand what the surface is made of.
You don't get to question an abstraction if you never learned it properly in the first place. You just inherit it, use it, and hope it holds.
That's the gap I try to work on with the guides and courses on
FAUN.sensei(). Not predicting the next breakthrough, but making sure the mental models underneath today's systems are still solid enough to be questioned when the time comes.
If you want to dig into that, the code
SENSEIFEBRUARY gives
20% off all courses throughout February.
Happy learning,
Aymen