I started my career as an industrial electrician, working in manufacturing and logistics. Most of my days were spent fixing what broke — controls, sensors, and the systems that kept production moving. That work taught me a lot about how things fail, and how to design so they don't.

Later, I earned my degree in cybersecurity and began working in network infrastructure for a financial organization. The problems were different, but the patterns were familiar — everything still came down to structure, maintenance, and people.

I come from a low middle class background where we learned to make things work with what we had. That mindset shaped how I approach both technology and life: keep it practical, keep it honest, and never assume something can't be improved.

Logic Applied grew out of that philosophy. It's a place where I explore how universal design principles — the kind that hold systems together — can also make life more resilient. My goal is to make cybersecurity, technology, and design thinking intuitive for everyday people, so families can live safer and more capable lives in a connected world.

I value authenticity, originality, and adaptability. Whether I'm troubleshooting a control panel or building a home system from salvaged parts, I try to find the balance between precision and humanity — because every system, no matter how complex, is built by people trying to make something work.

Core Values

Authenticity

Real solutions for real problems, without the fluff

Originality

Finding new connections between familiar patterns

Adaptability

Making things work with what you have, and improving from there