The story follows SPI, a software innovator from Quebec who rises above a turbulent family background, pursuing passions in science, machine-building, and entrepreneurship. Through triumphs and setbacks in academia and the tech industry-from MIT to Silicon Valley-SPI launches open source AI initiatives and navigates love, family, and cultural landscapes across North America and Europe. Ultimately, visa and business limitations force SPI to choose home and family life in Quebec over his tech ambitions abroad, bringing his journey full circle. "Transparent SPI" is as much an account of intellectual awakening as it is a memoir of adversity, resilience, and the complex ties of family and culture. Through its immersive narration and technical detail, the book offers both an intimate portrait of an unconventional childhood and a broader reflection on how curiosity and grit can transform hardship into mastery. The writing is richly descriptive, moving between technical precision and emotional resonance. The prose dwells on the tactile-cold surfaces, mechanical resistance, the feel of keys or tools in hand. Dialogue is used sparingly and is often laden with the weight of what goes unsaid, especially between SPI and his father or teachers. There is a persistent undercurrent of self-examination and metaphor: machines become not just objects but extensions or mirrors of SPI's mind and life circumstances. The recurring motif of assembling, disassembling, and rebuilding-whether machinery, code, or personal resolve-forms the book's structural and thematic backbone.