PRAXIS.
The World Model · 3D
FIG. 02 · OPERATING ATOM · 3D · v1
Live Fig. 01 · 2D ← Praxis
FIG. 02 · PRAXIS WORLD MODEL · THREE-DIMENSIONAL

The same atom, in three dimensions. Drag to rotate. Hover to inspect.

Six orbits at axial tilts, twenty-six entities, real lineage edges, drawn in actual three-dimensional space. Same data as Fig. 01, rendered as a navigable model. The camera slow-orbits on idle. Click and drag to take control. Hover any node to inspect it. The nucleus glows because it should — it is the firm.

FIG. 02 PRAXIS · OPERATING ATOM · 3D SCALE · 1:1 LOGICAL 2026-04-30 · MMXXVI
26 entities · 06 orbits
156 tables · 12 modules
99.94% uptime · 30d
CAM0.00° AZ 0.00° EL 12.0 R
LAST REFRESH04:18
DRAG rotate
SCROLL zoom
HOVER inspect
§ Methodology · the third dimension

Same ontology, rendered in space.

Every node is a real entity in the Praxis context database. The nucleus is the firm itself, glowing red because it is the load-bearing object the entire structure orbits. The first inner shell is the two operators. The second is the owned products (CultOps, CultLOS, TextBack). The third is methodology (Discovery Sprint, Build, Platform). The fourth is active engagements. The outermost shell is the AI tools layer — twelve translucent ghosts representing the 93% layer that sits on top of everything.

Each orbit is rendered at a slightly different axial tilt. This is not decorative. It is the only way to render six concentric shells in three-dimensional space without occlusion. The same trick is used in Bohr atomic model diagrams, mid-century corporate organization charts, and NASA orbital mechanics illustrations.

The lineage edges are real lineage, drawn as bezier curves through space. Aspire connects to both Sprint and Build because that engagement uses both methodologies. CultOps connects to Justin because he built it. Build connects to CultOps because the methodology produces that product as evidence. If a relationship breaks in the database, the curve breaks here.

"Most firms have an org chart. We have an operating atom. The difference is the org chart shows reporting lines. The atom shows the actual structure of the work, drawn from the same database that runs production."