The weekly letter from Systems Thinking Lab: systems thinking insights for junior engineers, framed through the seven building blocks.
AI writes the code. You make the call.
I rebuilt the entire site this month around that one sentence. Here is why, and what changed.
For two years the pitch was "understand the systems you build." True, but soft. It did not answer the question every engineer is actually asking in 2026: if AI can write the code, what exactly is left for me to be good at?
The answer is judgment. Output is cheap now. Anyone can generate a working function in thirty seconds. What nobody can generate for you is the call: does this system need a queue, or are you adding a moving part you will regret? Is this the design that survives traffic at 3 AM, or the one that looks clean in the demo and falls over in production?
Knowing what a queue is will not tell you whether this system needs one. That instinct is the whole game. And it is the one thing AI cannot hand you.
So the site now has two doors, and they say what they are.
Learn is free. The seven building blocks, every one of them, as articles and videos in one place, capped by a game where you assemble systems from the pieces. That is the knowledge. It is further than most engineers ever get, and it costs nothing.
Master is the courses. Not more to read. Reps. You study how real systems were solved, then design your own under real constraints, and you get told where your reasoning held and where it broke. That feedback is the part you cannot get from a video or a chatbot that agrees with everything you say.
Here is the line that holds the two together: free gets you the knowledge, the courses build the judgment.
And judgment does not come from consuming. It comes from doing. That is the part I want to be loud about, because everyone else in this space sells content you watch once and forget. Doing has more than one form. You study how a real system was solved and trace why each call was made. You run the framework on an app you use with Build with Blocks. You design under constraints and get graded on your thinking. You cannot read your way to judgment. You have to build.
There is one more new thing. Teams.
Good engineering judgment is not only an individual skill, it is a shared language. When a whole team can name the same seven blocks, design reviews stop being about taste and start being about tradeoffs. So there is now a free Team Workshop Kit: a facilitator guide to run a 60 to 90 minute session with your team on the free material, no purchase required. One person can bring the framework to everyone they work with.
None of this is a paywall trick. The framework is genuinely free, and it always will be. What you pay for is not access to information. It is the deliberate practice that turns information into instinct, the way it is taught at UC Berkeley.
In Course 1, the seven building blocks are the vocabulary. The labs and challenges are where that vocabulary becomes judgment you own.
You do not become the engineer who can build anything. You become the engineer who knows whether what got built is right.
P.S. The new front door is live. Walk through the framework, free, and play the capstone game at the end: systemthinkinglab.ai/learn/