Hampson Public Intelligence

Public Intelligence

Single-domain communiqués from Hampson Strategies.
Field notes from the PVIS lines — structured for clarity, not advice.

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31 reports

Getting Modern Offices Back On the Spectrum

APVISSpectrum CorrectionWorkplace Architecture

Most offices don't need to be reimagined. They need to be corrected. The core failure in modern offices is spectrum collapse—but fixing it is mechanical, not mystical.

January 23, 20268 min readtechnical memo

You Don't Have a Capacity Problem. You Have a Geometry Problem.

LPVISGeometric IntelligenceLogistics Systems

Most logistics breakdowns don't announce themselves as failures. They show up as routes that slowly lose reliability, yards that meet targets but feel brittle, and terminals that work—until they suddenly don't. From the system's perspective, they're interpretation failures.

January 20, 20269 min readtechnical memo

Tighter Windows, Better Outcomes: What the Data Is Really Showing at the Terminal Level

LPVISSystem EvolutionLogistics Systems

For operators on the ground, it can feel like things are getting harder: export windows compressing, fewer clean empties available, street-turn matches disappearing faster than they used to. From the outside, that looks like degradation. From inside the system—and inside the data—it's the opposite. What we're seeing now is not a loss of efficiency. It's the system shedding slack.

January 19, 20266 min readtechnical memo

Preventing 'Mass SOS Day': A Tessellated Network Architecture for Resilient Cellular Systems

NPVISTessellated ResilienceNetwork Architecture

Recent nationwide cellular outages—characterized by widespread devices falling into 'SOS only' mode—demonstrate a structural failure mode in modern telecom architecture. This article introduces a tessellated network architecture that replaces single-core dependency with local closure, quorum identity, and bounded fallback operation. Networks degrade gracefully rather than snapping to zero.

January 18, 202614 min readtechnical memo

Architecture, Not Artillery — A Geometric Approach to Cellular Sovereignty

MPVISSystems HardeningCellular Energy Geometry

Every cell operates inside a bounded energy geometry. Pathological states thrive when throughput is low, governance is loose, and constraint is cheap to evade. The goal is not aggression—it's raising the cost of disorder.

January 17, 202611 min readtechnical memo

PCRA in Practice: Why Our Security Demo Starts Small—and Why That's the Point

PCRAConstraint-First SecuritySecurity Architecture

Most modern security systems start from the same assumption: collect everything, then try to make sense of it. Our security demo is intentionally different. It is a working example of PCRA—Physics- and Constraint-Rooted Analysis—applied in the smallest scope that still produces defensible, reproducible signal.

January 16, 20267 min readtechnical note

The Downstream Logistics Effects Report

LPVISDownstream PropagationLogistics Systems

What hasn't surfaced yet—but will. This report is written from a downstream operator's vantage point. Not what headlines are covering, but what quietly compounds once today's logistics distortions propagate through contracts, insurance, capital, labor, and ultimately pricing behavior. The system is not breaking. It is re-pricing itself late, and unevenly.

January 14, 202612 min readtechnical memo

CAAR in Practice: Results from a 3D Turbulent Flow Simulation

EPVISArchitectural ValidationComputational Fluid Dynamics

This note documents the results of a full 3D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation evaluating the Convex Automotive Aero Recursion (CAAR) architecture under turbulent external flow. The goal was not to optimize drag or tune control laws, but to observe how geometry alone governs stress propagation, turbulence localization, and failure envelope shape under identical boundary conditions.

January 11, 20268 min readtechnical note

Seeing Supplier Problems Before They Become Procurement Emergencies

EPVISEarly Signal DetectionSupply Chain Intelligence

Most supplier failures don't arrive as surprises. They feel sudden only because the signals that preceded them weren't visible, weren't connected, or weren't interpretable in time. Procurement doesn't break when a supplier fails—it breaks when reaction replaces choice.

January 10, 20269 min readtechnical memo

APVIS: The Independent Agent — A New Market Forming in Plain Sight

APVISMarket FormationSpatial Design

A new market is forming around the Independent Agent—people who work, travel, and operate alone. Most industries still design for groups. The opportunity isn't luxury—it's clarity, boundaries, and calm geometry.

January 8, 20268 min readcommunique

Why Sugarcane Is the Next Gold

FPVISResource ReinterpretationIndustrial Systems

Gold rushes don't announce themselves. They show up as mispriced resources—things everyone sees, uses, and underestimates. Right now, sugarcane is one of those resources. Not as food. Not as nostalgia. But as industrial energy and chemical gold.

January 7, 20268 min readtechnical memo

Better Fuel, Naturally and Sovereignly

EPVISSystem ReinterpretationEnergy Systems

Energy independence is usually framed as a technology problem. It isn't. It's a substrate problem—what we choose to build from, and whether that substrate is already local, renewable, and controllable. We already have everything we need to produce better fuel—cleaner, cheaper, and sovereign—using natural systems that exist right here.

January 7, 202610 min readtechnical memo

Street-Turn Market Snapshot — Today's Signal Read

LPVISMarket Signal DetectionLogistics Systems

Across today's scan, secondary ports and inland rail hubs are quietly offering the best street-turn economics. The common thread: empties are forming where depots are thin and exports are ready, creating same-day reuse that avoids costly empty repositioning.

January 6, 20265 min readtechnical memo

On Synthesis, Continuity, and User Agency

PrincipalSystem DesignInnovation Philosophy

Innovation isn't about replacement—it's about identifying where artificial boundaries have been introduced, then reassembling the system so it can operate continuously while remaining steerable by the operator.

January 1, 20265 min readstatement

Why "Which AI Is Best?" Is the Wrong Question

PrincipalArchitectural LiteracyAI Systems

The most common conversation around AI trains users to confuse interface quality with intelligence. The real question isn't which model is best—it's what architecture makes the system reliable, accountable, and human-aligned.

December 29, 20257 min readtechnical memo

AI, Energy, and the Geometry of Constraint

PrincipalStructural AnalysisInfrastructure Systems

Rapid growth in AI workloads has intensified scrutiny of data-center energy and water consumption. This paper argues that energy and water consumption are emergent properties of compute geometry, not independent variables. Claims of large reductions are only meaningful when accompanied by explicit changes in where, when, and how heat is generated and dissipated.

December 29, 20258 min readtechnical memo

The Difference Between Testable Claims and Systemic Failure

PrincipalStructural AnalysisInstitutional Dynamics

Public discourse often conflates specific, testable claims with broad, incentive-driven system failures. Understanding the difference matters—especially when evaluating arguments that sound compelling, urgent, and highly detailed.

December 24, 20256 min readstatement

Domain-Correct Oxidation: Re-Routing High-Reactivity Lipids from Biology to Mechanical Systems

MPVISDomain CorrectionMaterial Systems

Modern industrial systems routinely misallocate materials across domains when optimization targets diverge from biological constraints. This paper proposes a domain-corrective framework for high-reactivity lipid substrates by re-routing their primary utility away from chronic human consumption and toward mechanical systems explicitly designed for controlled oxidation.

December 24, 202512 min readtechnical memo

The Overton Window Is Not a Lie — But It's Also Not a Line

MacroInterpretive GeometrySystems Thinking

The Overton window isn't wrong — it's incomplete. Ideas don't advance through persuasion; they settle when interpretive terrain reshapes. Understanding this geometry reveals why arguments feel circular and why consensus shifts quietly.

December 23, 20256 min readcommunique

Seeing Coordination Before It Breaks

NPVISCoordination ArchitectureLogistics Intelligence

Most logistics failures don't start as delays—they start as misalignment. Our dashboards surface coordination stress before performance breaks, tracking rhythm changes across network and terminal layers.

December 19, 20258 min readcommunique

I Was Wrong

PrincipalIntellectual HumilityPersonal Evolution

A reflection on intellectual humility, the difference between intuition and rigor, and why being wrong in public is a prerequisite for being right in private.

December 17, 20254 min readcommunique

Markets as Delay Systems

FPVISDelay System ArchitectureFinancial Markets

Why regime change is structural, nonlinear, and inevitable. Markets are not continuous pricing engines—they are delay systems with finite suppression capacity.

December 17, 202510 min readmemo

Observation, Not Creation

MacroEpistemic ArchitecturePhilosophy of Science

Reality doesn't depend on observation to exist. Only our explanations do. Most scientific paradoxes dissolve once we separate existence from explanation.

December 12, 20256 min readcommunique

Early Friction Is the First Form of Cost

DPVISEarly Friction ExposureDirtwork

A structural read on why acquisition risk starts in the land's hidden friction layers—long before engineering, grading plans, or entitlement work begins.

December 2, 20258 min readcommunique

The Mirror, The Door & The Room

MacroDimensional GrowthHuman Development

Most people think growth is linear—step by step, milestone by milestone. But there are not 'levels' to climb. There are dimensions we move between: the Mirror, the Door, the Room. A framework for dimensional growth, presence, and how people meet each other in clarity.

November 25, 20256 min readframework

GOOD NEWS — AI CAN'T REPLACE YOU. BAD NEWS — YOU HAVE TO REPLACE YOURSELF FIRST.

MacroInterpretive SovereigntyHuman Evolution

The 'AI wrote this' reflex isn't literary critique—it's avoidance of interpretation. When humans stop interpreting, they stop evolving. AI can't replace you, but refusing the mirror can.

November 24, 20258 min readcommunique

THE TWO DIMENSIONS OF REALITY (And Why That's All You Need)

MacroDimensional ArchitectureConsciousness Architecture

A structural dismantling of multi-dimensional cosmology. Reality operates through two dimensions: the layer that creates substrate, and the layer where substrate becomes foundation.

November 24, 20257 min readcommunique

The Internal Origin of Evolution

MacroInternal Evolution ArchitectureHuman Development

Darwin's theory starts inside us, not outside. We evolve according to how we interpret pressure, not the pressure itself. This report gives you the language for the internal engine behind evolution that most people feel but never articulate.

November 24, 20259 min readcommunique

THE DEATH OF THE NPC (But We're All Still Alive)

MacroIdentity SovereigntyConsciousness Architecture

A structural dismantling of the NPC myth through logic, mathematics, and the undeniable reality of human sovereignty.

November 24, 20256 min readcommunique

The Architecture of American Pressure

MacroPressure ArchitectureMacro

A structural map of how logistics, energy, credit, infrastructure, and demographic forces interact to shape the next era of American economic behavior.

November 19, 202512 min readmemo

Port Congestion and Lane Compression: A Timing Signal

NPVISCapacity CompressionLogistics

Observing structural compression in North American port systems and freight lanes. When capacity tightens, timing becomes the primary variable. A field note on logistics asymmetry.

January 20, 20257 min readcommunique
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