Named after George Boole — the mathematician who laid the foundation of the digital age — Boolean Logic is a software engineering company that builds robust, scalable web applications and microservice architectures.
Like Boole reduced complex logic to simple TRUE and FALSE values,
we reduce complex business problems into elegant, efficient software solutions.
if (need === true) { weDeliver(); }
Full-stack web applications built with Ruby on Rails, PHP, and modern frontend technologies. From MVPs to enterprise platforms.
Distributed systems and event-driven microservice architectures powered by NATS.io messaging for real-time, resilient communication.
Blazing fast APIs written in Go, designed for throughput and low latency. Built to handle millions of requests.
Expert database design, optimization and management across MySQL and PostgreSQL. Sharding, replication, and performance tuning.
Infrastructure as code, CI/CD pipelines, containerization and orchestration. We keep your systems running at scale.
Connecting legacy systems with modern stacks. API gateways, message queues, and seamless data flow between services.
The technologies behind our boolean operations
Click the inputs to toggle between 0 and 1
| A | B | AND | OR | XOR | NAND |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
George Boole was an English mathematician, philosopher, and logician. He is best known as the author of The Laws of Thought (1854), which established Boolean algebra — the foundation of all modern computer science and digital circuit design.
His revolutionary insight was that logical propositions could be expressed as mathematical equations,
reducing complex reasoning to simple operations on two values: TRUE (1) and FALSE (0).
Every search engine query, every database filter, every conditional statement in code — they all trace back to Boole's elegant algebra. We carry his name as a commitment to building software rooted in clarity, logic, and mathematical precision.
"No matter how correct a mathematical theorem may appear to be, one ought never to be satisfied that there was not something imperfect about it until it also gives the impression of being beautiful."— George Boole
Ready to turn your ideas into reality? Send us a signal.
We'll get back to you shortly.