Upcoming Works: From Logic to Infrastructure
The technical landscape of the mid-2020s can often feel like a "Sea of Fate"—a vast, unpredictable expanse of cloud dependencies, shifting licenses, and black-box algorithms. To navigate this, we are currently developing two foundational book series designed to return control to the individual engineer and researcher. These works are more than just tutorials; they are a documentation of our own journey in building sovereign tech.
Our primary project is Modern SWI-Prolog (2026 Edition). While many technical books dive straight into the deep end, this series is built specifically for the beginner who wants to understand the "why" behind logic programming before tackling the "how" of high-signal infrastructure. It begins with the simple foundations of logic, teaching you how to model facts and rules in a way that feels natural and verifiable. As the series progresses, it moves with you into more complex territory, documenting how we built our own local libraries and hybrid engines. By the time we reach the later volumes, we are exploring the intersection of observability, constraint optimization, and the integration of local LLMs—all while maintaining the deterministic "Truth Engine" at the core of the system.
Running alongside the Prolog series is The Sovereign Network Architect. We recognize that for many, modern networking feels like a steep, inaccessible wall, made even more confusing by the collapse of traditional virtualization standards. This series is our attempt to tear that wall down. We start where most people actually begin: the home lab. By using Proxmox as our primary laboratory, we show you how to design and secure a network from the ground up in a sovereign environment—free from the licensing uncertainty and corporate shifts that have redefined the industry.
Once the foundation of the first host is solid and the "Great Consolidation" of your data and services is complete, we transition those same principles into the enterprise design space. Our goal is to provide a clear, tried-and-tested roadmap that helps a beginner make sense of network security and architecture in the mid-2020s, moving from single-server deployments to resilient, multi-host clusters without losing the human-centric focus that makes a home lab so rewarding.
Whether you are here to learn the elegant logic of Prolog or to secure your first Proxmox bridge, these series are designed to be your companion in mastering the infrastructure of the future.
