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.