"Hello There" My name is Chris. I'm 53 as I write this in October of 2025, and I'm a gamer, a golfer, and a guy who's been (and continues to be) on a serious health journey. After losing and then gaining over 190 pounds and facing significant cardiac events, I thought I was doing everything right by following a 'keto' diet. I was wrong. I discovered I was eating 'dirty keto'—my 'health foods' were full of inflammatory oils, hidden starches, and artificial sweeteners that were working against me. 'The Path is Too Deep' is my personal blog about ditching the marketing and discovering the power of a Clean, Anti-Inflammatory, Whole-Food Ketogenic Lifestyle. I'll be sharing what I've learned about reading labels, my ongoing journey with weight loss, my strategies for managing mental health (ADHD/dysthymia), and my thoughts on gaming, golf, and technology. It's my personal rulebook for taking back control. "Not all those...
As we discussed in the analysis of Project Silica , the future of data storage relies on fundamentally changing the medium from silicon to quartz glass. However, optical glass storage is still in its infancy. To bridge the gap between the mechanical hard drives of the past and the optical drives of the future, engineers had to completely rethink the physical architecture of the modern Solid-State Drive (SSD). For decades, the technology sector relied on Moore’s Law - the observation that we could consistently shrink transistors and double the density of a microchip every two years. A few years ago, we hit a physical wall. We ran out of horizontal space. Here is the engineering physics of how 3D NAND bypassed the limits of Moore's Law by stacking memory cells vertically into microscopic skyscrapers. The Physics of the Silicon Ceiling Early SSDs utilized a flat, two-dimensional architecture called planar NAND. Millions of microscopic memory cells were arranged side-by-side on a silic...