🛠️ Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) — Preview
The Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) is the practical companion to RTT Micro Core.
Where the whitepaper defines the substrate, the MRT provides the tools — the operators, templates, and patterns you can use to build, test, and deploy micro‑scale resonance systems.
The MRT is:
- minimal
- modular
- deterministic
- designed for constrained environments
It is the applied layer of Micro Core.
🔧 What the Toolkit Provides#
The MRT includes:
-
Primitives
The smallest actionable units of micro‑scale behavior. -
Triad Templates
Ready‑to‑use structural patterns for micro‑triads. -
Coherence Tools
Methods for maintaining stability under drift and timing pressure. -
Resonance Operators
Actions that shape, sustain, or transform micro‑resonance. -
Flow Diagrams
Visual pathways for micro‑scale transitions. -
Sector Patterns
Reusable micro‑regime patterns for common environments. -
Examples
Minimal demonstrations of micro‑scale behavior. -
Integration Pathways
How to apply Micro Core and the MRT in real systems.
Each module stands alone and can be used independently.
🧩 Why the MRT Exists#
Micro Core defines:
- structure
- coherence
- transitions
- fractional dimensions
But applying these concepts requires tools that are:
- lightweight
- predictable
- easy to reason about
- suitable for embedded and distributed systems
The MRT fills that gap by turning the substrate into a usable toolkit.
⚡ Who the Toolkit Is For#
The MRT is designed for:
- engineers working with ultra‑low‑power devices
- researchers modeling micro‑regimes
- students learning micro‑scale RTT
- developers building micro‑agents or embedded loops
- educators teaching resonance‑time concepts
- anyone needing a stable micro‑substrate for constrained systems
If you’re working small, the MRT is your toolbox.
🧭 Where to Go Next#
Explore the full toolkit in the /toolkit/ directory:
- primitives
- templates
- operators
- diagrams
- examples
- integration pathways
Each page is modular and self‑contained — start anywhere.
The MRT is the bridge between understanding Micro Core and building with Micro Core.