About Us

Novelcorex began from a simple but familiar situation for technical learners: Assembly is often explained either too dryly or in disconnected fragments. Our team repeatedly noticed that many low-level programming materials show syntax but do not explain the thinking behind the instructions. That is why we created a course that helps examine Assembly through structure, memory, registers, stack, jumps, and execution logic.
The author behind this direction,
Sofiia Zhdanova — Assembly Code Architect, worked with low-level systems for over 2 years. Her background includes instruction analysis, learning scheme design, memory review, stack behavior, and technical material development for teams working with system-level code. She has previously collaborated with engineering groups in embedded solutions, hardware testing labs, and teams focused on code execution analysis.
The first Novelcorex materials did not begin as a commercial idea, but as a response to a real learning gap: people needed a clearer route through a complex topic. Sofiia started by creating short explanations, state tables, jump examples, and data movement schemes for small study groups. Over time, those materials became a complete system of digital learning resources.
Across her work, Sofiia has helped over 1,800 students and technical learners review Assembly through practical examples, step-by-step schemes, and careful code analysis. Her approach is not built on loud claims, but on consistent work with the material: first structure, then state, then interaction between instructions.
The mission of Novelcorex is to create learning materials that help people better understand low-level logic. We believe Assembly should not feel like a closed topic for a narrow group. It can be studied through clear examples, structured presentation, and careful attention to detail.