We have misunderstood the purpose of software. We treat it as a destination—a place to go and 'do work'. We stare at screens, manipulate widgets, and click buttons. This is wrong. Software should not be opaque; it should be transparent.
Software as Glass means the interface disappears. You should not be looking *at* the tool; you should be looking *through* it at the data, the insight, the reality you are trying to manipulate. The perfect interface is zero interface.
When you put on glasses, you don't admire the lenses; you admire the world they reveal. Yet in enterprise software, we are constantly forced to admire the smudges on the glass—the clunky UX, the slow loaders, the fragmented dashboards.
Our mission is to polish the glass until it vanishes. Refraction is the only allowable distortion—taking a beam of raw, chaotic intent and bending it precisely to hit the target. Everything else is just dirt on the lens.