FAQ
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What is QENE™?
QENE™ (Quantum Entropy Nullification Engine) is a sovereign-grade computational substrate that absorbs entropy, repurposes disorder, and redeploys it as operational clarity. It functions beneath classical software architecture, redefining survivability and efficiency.
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Who created QENE™?
Who created QENE™?
QENE™ was architected by Dr. Joshua S. Brickman. It is the product of rigorous derivation, not commercial iteration. -

What makes QENE™ different from traditional software?
QENE™ is not software—it is substrate. It operates beneath the stack, nullifying entropy and enabling causation-first logic across any domain
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Can QENE™ integrate with existing systems?
Yes. QENE™ features open compatibility interfacing, allowing seamless deployment across legacy and modern architectures with minimal footprint.
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Does QENE™ use machine learning?
QENE™ includes a low-debt ML pipeline, enabling adaptive optimization without bloating architecture or compromising survivability.
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How does QENE™ handle compression?
QENE™ offers perfect lossy transparent compression—data can be read and written without decompression, maintaining fidelity and performance
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Why is innovation treated as the product?
At QENE Dynamics™, innovation is not a consequence—it is the core. We reject profit-first paradigms and inscribe value through sovereign-grade discovery
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Is QENE™ open source?
QENE™ is sovereign-grade and selectively licensed. Deployment is governed by legacy-grade protocols and constitutional infrastructure.
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What industries can benefit from QENE™?
QENE™ is deployed across any industry. Its versatility is bounded only by human creativity.
FAQs
🔹 What is the difference between software engineering and computer science?
Software engineering focuses on designing, building, testing, and maintaining software systems using engineering principles. Computer science is broader—it explores algorithms, data structures, computation theory, and the mathematical foundations of computing.
🔹 What is an API and why is it important?
An API (Application Programming Interface) is a set of rules that allows different software systems to communicate. APIs enable modular development, third-party integrations, and scalable architecture—making them essential for modern software ecosystems.
🔹 What is the difference between front-end and back-end development?
Front-end development deals with the user interface and experience—what users see and interact with. Back-end development handles server-side logic, databases, and application infrastructure. Together, they form a full-stack system.
🔹 What is version control and why is Git so popular?
Version control tracks changes to code over time, allowing teams to collaborate, revert, and branch safely. Git is popular because it’s distributed, fast, and supports branching workflows. Platforms like GitHub and GitLab have made Git central to modern development.
🔹 What is software scalability?
Scalability refers to a system’s ability to handle increased load—users, data, or transactions—without performance degradation. Scalable software can grow with demand, often through modular architecture, cloud deployment, and optimized resource management.