Draft:Divided Iceberg Model

Edward T. Hall's Iceberg Model
In 1976, Edward Twitchell Hall developed the iceberg analogy of culture. If the culture of a society was the iceberg, Hall reasoned, than there are some visible aspects, above the water, and a larger portion hidden underwater, beneath the surface.

Adam Ellouze's Iceberg Model
Based on this theory, Adam Ellouze created the "Divided Iceberg Analogy of IT". In 2011, Adam developed the model. It has 5 layers : The first is Front-End, that represents Web Browsers, Search Engines, and Static Web Development. The second layer being Back-End represents backend languages like Python, PHP and other ones, but also Servers and Server languages like SQL, mySQL, MongoDB and Redis. The third layer is OSes, OS-Dev langs, low-level languages, and Shell languages. We find in this category, Bootloaders, Firmware, Bash/SH, C, Zig, ASM, and Rust. The forth level is hardware, like PUs, RAM, SSD, and binary/logic gates. Finally, we find Silicon, or general minerals used to build and develop hardware.