Industrial control technology has become increasingly powerful over the past decades.
PLC systems can now perform millions of operations per second, sensors and communication are digitized, and data streams flow all the way to the cloud.
But one thing has hardly changed: the way we think.
Engineers still describe the behavior of machines with instructions β "if this, then that".
This approach works as long as the process is simple.
But as complexity increases, it inevitably reaches a point where no one understands the entire system anymore.
The program becomes an unmanageable web of dependencies and exceptions.
Selmo breaks exactly this cycle.
It replaces thinking in instructions with thinking in states, rules and behavior.
Thus a new era begins in control engineering:
from program to model, from code to process, from logic to clarity.