UNIBASE

Against the Grain: A 45-Year Refusal to Accept O(log n)

Architecture for the ‘One Intelligent Person’ Enterprise

The 45-Year Objective

Solving the fundamental structural inefficiency of how machines process logic

1981 – 1995: The Relational Limit

Field: Global Logistics & Commercial Systems

During the early 80s, Rick Marshall identified the “Original Sin” of computing: the recursive B+ Tree. While the industry moved toward SQL, Rick began engineering a kernel that treated logic as a physical memory offset. This was the start of the journey to break the O(log n) wall.

1996 – 2010: The DNA Breakthrough

Field: High-Volume Retail

Scaling complex supply chain systems required a move away from “dead” procedural code. Rick developed DNA Programming—injecting structural blueprints into a generic engine. This allowed live system evolution across thousands of nodes without a single re-compile or reboot.

2011 – 2026: The Sovereign AI Runtime

Field: Deterministic Intelligence & Autonomous Infrastructure

The final hardening of the 5GL Direct-Execution Kernel. By collapsing millions of lines of code into high-density semantic structures, Unibase achieved 100:1 logic compression. The result is the deterministic grounding required for the Agentic Era.

The Power of the Singular Mind

Meta and Oracle hire thousands of engineers to optimize the O(log n) wall. Rick Marshall spent 45 years tearing it down.

Unibase is the product of what Mark Zuckerberg calls the “One Intelligent Person” model. Massive breakthroughs don’t emerge from committee-driven architecture; they come from unencumbered focus. Because Rick worked outside the corporate noise, he was able to maintain a First Principles approach to the kernel.

We aren’t offering a team to be managed; we are offering the Sovereign IP that emerged from a life of singular, uninterrupted focus. This is the ultimate force multiplier for the next generation of AI clusters.

Verified by MonsterInsights